The Clone Wars microseries is an interesting addition to the Star Wars movies. Bits of history that didn't show up in the movies are explored in it, including Anakin's Knighting.

When Obi-Wan proposes that Anakin should be Knighted (in Ch. 21), it's not entirely because he feels that Anakin is ready to be a Knight. In part, it's because the Clone Wars have been eating up Knights.

Obi-Wan actually proposes that Anakin *forego* the Trials and be promoted to Knight without formal testing. Obi-Wan's reasoning is that Anakin has already come through difficulties much harder than what the Council would set him. He survived a Trial of Skill -- defeating Ventress on Yavin 4 (in ch.17, 18, and 19) -- a Trial of the Flesh -- when Count Dooku maimed him in AotC -- and a Trial of Courage -- everything the Clone Wars he has thrown at him. The only thing that Anakin never undertook was a Trial of Spirit.

Given that one of the Council members calls the Trial of the Spirit 'Facing The Mirror' and the vision/dream sequence right before Obi-Wan proposes Anakin's Knighting, I think this is what Luke went through in the Dark Tree on Dagobah.

This Trial is the Jedi equivalent of the hero's descent into the underworld. It's the place where a person confronts everything they have neglected or rejected about themselves, a confrontation with one's personal Darkness, or Shadow to use Jungian terms. If things go right, such a test burns of the slag in one's soul, leaving only the pure and tempered metal. If things go wrong, a person can be destroyed.

The fact that Anakin never has a formal Trial of the Spirit is a disastrous mistake on the part of the Jedi. Even through later in the microseries (ch. 23 and 24) he does have a vision, it's too late and he's too unprepared. Anakin can't integrate his Shadow, can't face his Mirror; he has no center where he can stand fast and self-assured.

Luke, on the other hand, gets shoved into his Trials with less than a year of training. Yoda sends Luke into the Dark Tree in the scene right after he accepts Luke as a student. For Yoda and Obi-Wan to do this indicates that they are so desperate that they are willing to risk destroying Luke in the process of making him; he's really too new in his training to be expected to come out all right, but he is dumped into the fire anyway.

Such ferocious testing means that Luke *is* a Jedi Master by RotJ, but he's been made so at enormous risk. If he had failed at the Tree -- been unable to integrate that vision with himself and Yoda's later teachings -- Luke could have become just as dangerous as his father.

From: [identity profile] dphearson.livejournal.com


Hmmm.

The thing is, Luke is strong in way that Yoda and Ben are not. as whiny as teen Luke was, he had a deeply ingrained sense of right and wrong, a deeply loving spirit and a willingness to defend others- even sacrificing himself ( as he was prepared to do in Jedi). Luke is also accepting. Not tolerant- accepting.

When he is cradling that stump of his hand, he says something that points to this:

"Ben, why didn't you tell me?"

From: [identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com


Yes, Luke is mucher stronger than Yoda and Ben. His roots go all the way to the bottom, and while he can be shaken severely, he can't be destroyed the way Obi-Wan was by Anakin's betrayal.
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