Hello, you are not signed on.
[ Blogs.starwars.com ]

Bounty Hunters Pride - the ramblings of Louis Turfrey
date posted: Oct 28, 2006 5:32 PM
The Changing Jedi
I often think - what if the Jedi had always been allowed to form relationships? Many of my stories involve Jedi, or fallen Jedi, in relationships of one sort of the other. I don't mean friendships, or peer relationships - I mean relationships of passion and love.

Would Obi Wan have been so blind to the changes in Anakin Skywalker if he had been his real son? Wouldn't he have been able to sense the problems before they arose? The same could be said of Anakin. If he had been allowed to retain contact with his mother, he might have sensed the impending danger before it had happened - he might even have been there to prevent it.

The isolation of an individual from all that he has known and that he has grown up with can cause more problems than it can solve. Yoda sensed this when he first met Anakin. This was the reason why many Jedi were enroled in the academy as infants, and isolated from their parents. The Jedi assumed that growth with the Force required complete dedication and resolve - yet Luke was able to learn enough about the Force to challenge and technically defeat his father Anakin - within a few short years. As he grew within the Force, he was still surrounded by friends and family - only being isolated whilst on Dagobah.

Eventually, his relationship with Mara Jade developed - and in some ways counterpointed his role as a Jedi Master. In fact, had it not been for the intervention of his sister whilst fighting against the reborn Emperor - he may never have survived to become a true Jedi.

Maybe, to become a true Jedi - you have to understand the passions and beliefs that lead to the Dark Side. Maybe you have to know your enemy before you can defeat him. It could be that by isolating themselves from the rest of the galactic population, and by serving - instead of joining - the Jedi were the cause of their own demise. In the end they fell victim to their own propoganda - and it was their downfall.

  "The Ewok"
date Posted: Oct 28, 2006 6:56 PM
Maybe, to become a true Jedi - you have to understand the passions and beliefs that lead to the Dark Side.


If this were true, then we all would be standing on the dark side. Isolating yourself from passion is just...horrible.
janlomona
Smugglers Rants
date Posted: Oct 29, 2006 1:10 AM
"To understand the Force you have to know all its aspects, not just the narrow, dogmatic view of the Jedi."
Great blog, and very true. Qui-Gon, with his deeper understanding of the Living Force, would have likely made a wiser member of the council than any other Jedi, but his renegade, non-conformist ways put an end to that.
Luke was raised in a strict but loving home, as was Leia, and that growth gave him the maturity and the strength to say 'No' not only to his fathers offer of great power but also to the Emperor, who offered him the stars.
Without that grounding, he may well have sucuumbed to the alure of the dark side.
starhorsepax
date Posted: Oct 29, 2006 9:55 AM
There are suggestions in comics that this complete isolation rule didn't always exist. In Secrets of the Jedi they suggest Qui Gon and Obi Wan both faced it and dealed with it differently. . Seems that part of Anakin's problem had more to do with isolation-not being able to share his fears for Padme (he didn't give Yoda any details) than the passion itelf. Its easy for passion to lead to the dark side, but its part of the living force and it would make more sense to be cautious and teach about the riskes and difficult decisions than outright forbid it. There were enough jedi originally that they should have been able to support the ones who had families, and avoid situations where it would affect their ability to judge impartially.
  • Please log in to post comments