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{{Top|fa|type=legends}}
{{Eras|old|imp|new|leg|featured}}
 
 
{{Organization
 
{{Organization
 
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|leader=
 
|leader=
 
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|members=*[[Jolee Bindo]]<ref name="KotOR">''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic]]''</ref>
 
*[[Voss Mystics]]<ref name="Creating">[http://www.swtor.com/news/blog/20100514_001 Star Wars: The Old Republic | News & Updates, Developer Blogs - "Creating Worlds"]</ref>
 
*[[Imperial Knight]]s<ref name="Leg0">''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0]]''</ref><ref name="Leg0.5">''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0½]]''</ref>
 
*[[Jensaarai]]<ref name="JATM">''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]''</ref>
 
 
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{{Quote|Jinn always does things his own way, always sure he is right, always incredulous if we do not see it his way. Some think he is a gray Jedi.|Tyvokka, on Qui-Gon Jinn|Star Wars 36: The Stark Hyperspace War, Part 1}}
 
{{Quote|Jinn always does things his own way, always sure he is right, always incredulous if we do not see it his way. Some think he is a gray Jedi.|Tyvokka, on Qui-Gon Jinn|Star Wars 36: The Stark Hyperspace War, Part 1}}
The term '''Gray Jedi''', or '''Gray''', had three meanings. First, it was used by [[Jedi/Legends|Jedi]] and [[Sith/Legends|Sith]] to describe [[Force-sensitive/Legends|Force-users]] who walked the line between the [[Light side of the Force/Legends|light]] and [[Dark side of the Force/Legends|dark]] sides of [[The Force/Legends|the Force]] without surrendering to the dark side, and second, it described Jedi who distanced themselves from the [[Jedi High Council/Legends|Jedi High Council]] and operated outside the strictures of the [[Jedi Code/Legends|Jedi Code]]. The third refers to Jedi who do not fuc with de war. However, those who were considered to be ''true'' Gray Jedi met all three qualifications and did not belong to any particular Force tradition. One example was [[Jolee Bindo]], a former Jedi [[Padawan/Legends|Padawan]] and a Gray Jedi that served the [[Galactic Republic/Legends|Old Republic]].
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The term '''Gray Jedi''', or '''Gray''', had two meanings. First, it was used by [[Jedi/Legends|Jedi]] and [[Sith/Legends|Sith]] to describe [[Force-sensitive/Legends|Force-users]] who walked the line between the [[Light side of the Force/Legends|light]] and [[Dark side of the Force/Legends|dark]] sides of [[The Force/Legends|the Force]] without surrendering to the dark side, and second, it described Jedi who distanced themselves from the [[Jedi High Council/Legends|Jedi High Council]] and operated outside the strictures of the [[Jedi Code/Legends|Jedi Code]]. However, those who were considered to be ''true'' Gray Jedi met both qualifications and did not belong to any particular Force tradition. One example was [[Jolee Bindo]], a former Jedi [[Padawan/Legends|Padawan]] and a Gray Jedi that served the [[Galactic Republic/Legends|Old Republic]].
   
Although the term did not directly refer to those who were capable of using both light and dark side [[Force power/Legends|Force abilities]], all Gray Jedi could do so. The term was similar to that of "[[Dark Jedi/Legends|Dark Jedi]]" in that it could refer to any Force-user, and not only to Jedi. For example, the [[Voss Mystics]] were considered to be Gray despite holding very different views than, and refusing association with, the [[Jedi Order/Legends|Jedi Order]]. [[Sith/Legends|Sith]] were never considered to be Gray Jedi, as the Sith Order taught full commitment to the dark side.
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Although the term did not directly refer to those who were capable of using both light and dark side [[Force power/Legends|Force abilities]], all Gray Jedi could do so. The term was similar to that of "[[Dark Jedi/Legends|Dark Jedi]]" in that it could refer to any Force-user, and not only to Jedi.
   
 
The term was sometimes used to refer to unorthodox or dissident Jedi who did not meet the strictest requirements of being a Gray Jedi. For example, the Jedi [[Qui-Gon Jinn/Legends|Qui-Gon Jinn]] was thought of by some members of the Jedi Order as a Gray Jedi for his disagreements with the High Council. A group of renegade Jedi called the [[Gray Paladin]]s used the term this way to describe themselves - they advocated minimal reliance on the Force and the use of [[Blaster/Legends|blasters]], but otherwise held to the Jedi Code.
 
The term was sometimes used to refer to unorthodox or dissident Jedi who did not meet the strictest requirements of being a Gray Jedi. For example, the Jedi [[Qui-Gon Jinn/Legends|Qui-Gon Jinn]] was thought of by some members of the Jedi Order as a Gray Jedi for his disagreements with the High Council. A group of renegade Jedi called the [[Gray Paladin]]s used the term this way to describe themselves - they advocated minimal reliance on the Force and the use of [[Blaster/Legends|blasters]], but otherwise held to the Jedi Code.
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In the days of the [[Galactic Republic/Legends|Old Republic]], the [[Jedi Order/Legends|Jedi Order]] was largely decentralized. At this [[Time/Legends|time]], [[Jedi academy|Jedi academies]] were spread throughout [[The galaxy/Legends|the galaxy]]. [[Jedi/Legends|Jedi]] were also trained by individual [[Jedi Master/Legends|Masters]] without the benefit of an academy. This decentralization meant that Jedi were accepted into the Order, trained, and [[Knighting ceremony/Legends|Knighted]] without ever having to visit the galactic [[Capital/Legends|capital]], [[Coruscant/Legends|Coruscant]]. Unlike the Jedi of later years, the Jedi at this time were fractious and unwilling to bow to their own central authority&mdash;the [[Jedi High Council/Legends|Jedi High Council]].<ref name="KotORCG" />
 
In the days of the [[Galactic Republic/Legends|Old Republic]], the [[Jedi Order/Legends|Jedi Order]] was largely decentralized. At this [[Time/Legends|time]], [[Jedi academy|Jedi academies]] were spread throughout [[The galaxy/Legends|the galaxy]]. [[Jedi/Legends|Jedi]] were also trained by individual [[Jedi Master/Legends|Masters]] without the benefit of an academy. This decentralization meant that Jedi were accepted into the Order, trained, and [[Knighting ceremony/Legends|Knighted]] without ever having to visit the galactic [[Capital/Legends|capital]], [[Coruscant/Legends|Coruscant]]. Unlike the Jedi of later years, the Jedi at this time were fractious and unwilling to bow to their own central authority&mdash;the [[Jedi High Council/Legends|Jedi High Council]].<ref name="KotORCG" />
   
[[File:Atristrial.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Atris, last survivor of the High Council after the First Jedi Purge, judging Meetra Surik in 3,959 BBY.]]
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[[File:Atristrial.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Atris, last survivor of the High Council after the First Jedi Purge, judging Meetra Surik in 3,959 BBY.]]
However, between the beginning of the [[Great Sith War]] in [[4000 BBY]] and the end of the [[Dark Wars]] in [[3951 BBY]], the Jedi went from the height of their power to a [[First Jedi Purge|mere remnant]] of their existence. As war repeatedly spread across the galaxy, some Jedi came to believe that a strong central authority was necessary. The Council, including such members as [[Vrook Lamar]] and [[Atris]], revised the [[Jedi Code/Legends|Jedi Code]] in order to consolidate their control over the Jedi Order and institute stricter standards on the conduct of its members. Despite the Council's actions, not all Jedi adhered to the revised Code. Some objected to several of the new strictures, such as those that barred the training of any Jedi hopeful over the age of four, that prevented Jedi from having families,<ref name="KotORCG" /> and that restricted the use of [[Force power/Legends|Force abilities]] associated with the [[Dark side of the Force/Legends|dark side]].<ref name="JATM" /> These individuals frequently clashed with the Jedi Council, and were known as Gray Jedi to the Jedi<ref name="KotORCG" /> and the Sith.<ref name="JATM" />
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However, between the beginning of the [[Great Sith War]] in [[4000 BBY/Legends|4000 BBY]] and the end of the [[Dark Wars]] in [[3951 BBY]], the Jedi went from the height of their power to a [[First Jedi Purge|mere remnant]] of their existence. As war repeatedly spread across the galaxy, some Jedi came to believe that a strong central authority was necessary. The Council, including such members as [[Vrook Lamar]] and [[Atris]], revised the [[Jedi Code/Legends|Jedi Code]] in order to consolidate their control over the Jedi Order and institute stricter standards on the conduct of its members. Despite the Council's actions, not all Jedi adhered to the revised Code. Some objected to several of the new strictures, such as those that barred the training of any Jedi hopeful over the age of four, that prevented Jedi from having families,<ref name="KotORCG" /> and that restricted the use of [[Force power/Legends|Force abilities]] associated with the [[Dark side of the Force/Legends|dark side]].<ref name="JATM">''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]''</ref> These individuals frequently clashed with the Jedi Council, and were known as Gray Jedi to the Jedi<ref name="KotORCG" /> and the Sith.<ref name="JATM" />
   
The Jedi [[Padawan/Legends|Padawan]] [[Jolee Bindo]] fought for the Galactic Republic in the Great [[Sith/Legends|Sith]] War against the [[Sith Lord/Legends|Sith Lord]] [[Exar Kun/Legends|Exar Kun]], who sought to establish a new [[Golden Age of the Sith]]. After the war ended in [[3996 BBY]], Bindo abandoned the Jedi Order and became a Gray Jedi. In [[3956 BBY]], Bindo again took part in major galactic events when he joined the amnesiac Jedi [[Revan/Legends|Revan]] and fought against [[Dark Lord of the Sith/Legends|Dark Lord of the Sith]] [[Darth Malak]]'s [[Sith Empire (Jedi Civil War)|Sith Empire]] until the [[Battle of Rakata Prime|end]] of the [[Jedi Civil War]], after which he was officially [[Cross of Glory|recognized]] by the Galactic Republic for his actions.<ref name="KotOR" /> Some Old Republic Gray Jedi wore custom, gray [[Jedi apparel|robes]]. Bindo once wore a [[Jolee's robe|unique version]] of these robes.<ref name="KotOR II">''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]''</ref>
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The Jedi [[Padawan/Legends|Padawan]] [[Jolee Bindo]] fought for the Galactic Republic in the Great [[Sith/Legends|Sith]] War against the [[Sith Lord/Legends|Sith Lord]] [[Exar Kun/Legends|Exar Kun]], who sought to establish a new [[Golden Age of the Sith]]. After the war ended in [[3996 BBY]], Bindo abandoned the Jedi Order and became a Gray Jedi. In [[3956 BBY]], Bindo again took part in major galactic events when he joined the amnesiac Jedi [[Revan/Legends|Revan]] and fought against [[Dark Lord of the Sith/Legends|Dark Lord of the Sith]] [[Darth Malak]]'s [[Sith Empire (Jedi Civil War)|Sith Empire]] until the [[Battle of Rakata Prime|end]] of the [[Jedi Civil War]], after which he was officially [[Cross of Glory|recognized]] by the Galactic Republic for his actions.<ref name="KotOR">''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic]]''</ref> Some Old Republic Gray Jedi wore custom, gray [[Jedi apparel|robes]]. Bindo once wore a [[Jolee's robe|unique version]] of these robes.<ref name="KotOR II">''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]''</ref>
   
During the [[Cold War]] between the Galactic Republic and the [[Sith Empire (Post–Great Hyperspace War)|reconstituted Sith Empire]], shortly after the implementation of the [[Treaty of Coruscant]] in [[3653 BBY]], the [[Voss (species)|Voss]] [[Species/Legends|species]] was discovered on the [[Planet/Legends|planet]] of the [[Voss|same name]]. Voss society, isolated in the mountain-top fortress of [[Voss-Ka]],<ref name="Voss">{{Holonet|planets|voss|Voss}}</ref> was led by the totalitarian control of the [[Voss Mystics]], who were considered to be Gray by the Jedi and the Sith.<ref name="Creating" /> Led by the [[Force vision/Legends|visions]] of the Mystics, the Voss had been defending their capital [[City/Legends|city]] from the assault of the hostile [[Gormak]] species for centuries before they revealed themselves to the larger galaxy by foiling [[Imperial Attack on Voss|occupation plots]] by both the Republic and the Empire. Both galactic governments then established embassies in Voss-Ka. The Voss Mystics rejected the offering of teaching from the Jedi and Sith in favor of their own dogma.<ref name="Voss" />
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During the [[Cold War (Galactic Republic&ndash;Sith Empire)|Cold War]] between the Galactic Republic and the [[Sith Empire (Post–Great Hyperspace War)|reconstituted Sith Empire]], shortly after the implementation of the [[Treaty of Coruscant]] in [[3653 BBY]], the [[Voss (species)|Voss]] [[Species/Legends|species]] was discovered on the [[Planet/Legends|planet]] of the [[Voss|same name]]. Voss society, isolated in the mountain-top fortress of [[Voss-Ka]],<ref name="Voss">{{Holonet|both=true|planets|voss|Voss|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20190918163144/http://www.swtor.com/holonet/planets/voss}}</ref> was led by the totalitarian control of the [[Voss Mystics]], who were considered to be Gray by the Jedi and the Sith.<ref name="Creating">{{TORweb|url=news/blog/20100514_001|text=Creating Worlds|nobackup=1}}</ref> Led by the [[Force vision/Legends|visions]] of the Mystics, the Voss had been defending their capital [[City/Legends|city]] from the assault of the hostile [[Gormak]] species for centuries before they revealed themselves to the larger galaxy by foiling [[Imperial Attack on Voss|occupation plots]] by both the Republic and the Empire. Both galactic governments then established embassies in Voss-Ka. The Voss Mystics rejected the offering of teaching from the Jedi and Sith in favor of their own dogma.<ref name="Voss" />
   
 
===New Sith Wars &ndash; Second Imperial Civil War===
 
===New Sith Wars &ndash; Second Imperial Civil War===
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Shortly after the end of the [[New Sith Wars]] and the [[Ruusan Reformation]]s in [[1000 BBY]], the [[Lore Keeper|Jedi Chief Librarian]] [[Restelly Quist/Legends|Restelly Quist]] wrote about Gray Jedi in the Jedi training manual [[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force|''The Jedi Path'']]. Quist described Gray Jedi as mavericks and classified them as a threat to Jedi teachings.<ref name="TJP">[[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']]</ref>
 
Shortly after the end of the [[New Sith Wars]] and the [[Ruusan Reformation]]s in [[1000 BBY]], the [[Lore Keeper|Jedi Chief Librarian]] [[Restelly Quist/Legends|Restelly Quist]] wrote about Gray Jedi in the Jedi training manual [[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force|''The Jedi Path'']]. Quist described Gray Jedi as mavericks and classified them as a threat to Jedi teachings.<ref name="TJP">[[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']]</ref>
   
[[File:Njo kubisnu.svg|right|thumb|150px|Kelbis Nu, Jensaarai and Jedi Knight]]
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[[File:Njo kubisnu.svg|thumb|right|150px|Kelbis Nu, Jensaarai and Jedi Knight]]
 
Centuries later, during the [[Stark Hyperspace War/Legends|Stark Hyperspace War]] in [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], some Jedi were considered as Gray simply for clashing with the High Council, not necessarily for experimenting with the dark side. The Jedi [[Qui-Gon Jinn/Legends|Qui-Gon Jinn]] was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent disagreements with the Council. Jedi Master [[Tyvokka]] expressed concern over this<ref name="Stark">''[[Star Wars 36: The Stark Hyperspace War, Part 1]]''</ref> and Master [[Obi-Wan Kenobi/Legends|Obi-Wan Kenobi]] confessed that he could see why some might view Jinn as a Gray Jedi.<ref name="TJP" /> A faction of dissident Jedi at this time used the term "gray" to describe themselves despite their dedication to the Jedi Code. This group, the [[Gray Paladin]]s, was an offshoot of the [[Teepo Paladins]].<ref name="CN2">''[[Coruscant Nights II: Street of Shadows]]''</ref>
 
Centuries later, during the [[Stark Hyperspace War/Legends|Stark Hyperspace War]] in [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], some Jedi were considered as Gray simply for clashing with the High Council, not necessarily for experimenting with the dark side. The Jedi [[Qui-Gon Jinn/Legends|Qui-Gon Jinn]] was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent disagreements with the Council. Jedi Master [[Tyvokka]] expressed concern over this<ref name="Stark">''[[Star Wars 36: The Stark Hyperspace War, Part 1]]''</ref> and Master [[Obi-Wan Kenobi/Legends|Obi-Wan Kenobi]] confessed that he could see why some might view Jinn as a Gray Jedi.<ref name="TJP" /> A faction of dissident Jedi at this time used the term "gray" to describe themselves despite their dedication to the Jedi Code. This group, the [[Gray Paladin]]s, was an offshoot of the [[Teepo Paladins]].<ref name="CN2">''[[Coruscant Nights II: Street of Shadows]]''</ref>
   
Around [[19 BBY/Legends|19 BBY]], near the end of the [[Clone Wars/Legends|Clone Wars]], a new sect of Gray Jedi was inadvertently created when Jedi Master [[Nejaa Halcyon]] led a strike team to [[Susevfi]] to confront the [[Dark Jedi/Legends|fallen Jedi]] [[Nikkos Tyris]] and his followers.<ref name="I, Jedi">''[[I, Jedi]]''</ref> Tyris had been studying the writings of [[Larad Noon]], a Sith follower of Kun's during the [[Old Sith Wars]].<ref name="END">{{Hyperspace|url=hyperspace/member/insideronline/88/indexp2.html|text=Evil Never Dies: The Sith Dynasties|int=Evil Never Dies: The Sith Dynasties}}</ref> Tyris and his most elite followers were [[Duel on Susevfi|killed]] by the Jedi strike team, but there were other members of the cult of whom the Jedi had not been aware and who survived the attack. These survivors were unable to interpret the advanced dark side teachings in Noon's writings and instead developed a unique [[The Force/Legends|Force]] tradition known as the [[Jensaarai]]. When the [[Galactic Empire/Legends|Galactic Empire]] [[Declaration of a New Order|came to power]], some Jensaarai offered their services to [[Galactic Emperor/Legends|Emperor]] [[Palpatine/Legends|Palpatine]] and were [[Death/Legends|slain]]. In response, the Jensaarai retreated into hiding. They re-emerged in [[11 ABY/Legends|11 ABY]] and became allies with the [[New Jedi Order]].<ref name="I, Jedi" /> While the New Jedi Order was willing to accept Jensaarai students at the [[Jedi Praxeum]], they considered the entire order to be Gray Jedi, although the Jensaarai outwardly denied these claims.<ref name="JATM" /> [[Kelbis Nu]], a Jensaarai who was later trained as a Jedi, participated in the [[Yuuzhan Vong War]] in [[26 ABY]].<ref name="Edge of Victory II: Rebirth">''[[The New Jedi Order: Edge of Victory II: Rebirth]]''</ref>
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Around [[19 BBY/Legends|19 BBY]], near the end of the [[Clone Wars/Legends|Clone Wars]], a new sect of Gray Jedi was inadvertently created when Jedi Master [[Nejaa Halcyon]] led a strike team to [[Susevfi]] to confront the [[Dark Jedi/Legends|fallen Jedi]] [[Nikkos Tyris]] and his followers.<ref name="I, Jedi">''[[I, Jedi]]''</ref> Tyris had been studying the writings of [[Larad Noon]], a Sith follower of Kun's during the [[Old Sith Wars]].<ref name="END">{{Hyperspace|url=hyperspace/member/insideronline/88/indexp2.html|text=Evil Never Dies: The Sith Dynasties|int=Evil Never Dies: The Sith Dynasties|archivedate=20110629021310}}</ref> Tyris and his most elite followers were [[Duel on Susevfi|killed]] by the Jedi strike team, but there were other members of the cult of whom the Jedi had not been aware and who survived the attack. These survivors were unable to interpret the advanced dark side teachings in Noon's writings and instead developed a unique [[The Force/Legends|Force]] tradition known as the [[Jensaarai]]. When the [[Galactic Empire/Legends|Galactic Empire]] [[Declaration of a New Order|came to power]], some Jensaarai offered their services to [[Galactic Emperor/Legends|Emperor]] [[Palpatine/Legends|Palpatine]] and were [[Death/Legends|slain]]. In response, the Jensaarai retreated into hiding. They re-emerged in [[11 ABY/Legends|11 ABY]] and became allies with the [[New Jedi Order]].<ref name="I, Jedi" /> While the New Jedi Order was willing to accept Jensaarai students at the [[Jedi Praxeum]], they considered the entire order to be Gray Jedi, although the Jensaarai outwardly denied these claims.<ref name="JATM" /> [[Kelbis Nu]], a Jensaarai who was later trained as a Jedi, participated in the [[Yuuzhan Vong War]] in [[26 ABY]].<ref name="Edge of Victory II: Rebirth">''[[The New Jedi Order: Edge of Victory II: Rebirth]]''</ref>
   
Some time after [[41 ABY]], when [[Jagged Fel]] was selected as the [[Head of State/Legends|Head of State]] of the [[Imperial Remnant|Galactic Empire]],<ref>''[[Legacy of the Force: Invincible]]''</ref> a sect of [[Force-sensitive/Legends|Force-users]] modeled after the Jedi Order and loyal to the Empire was established.<ref name="Leg33">''[[Legacy 33: Fight Another Day, Part 2]]''</ref> The members of this organization became known as [[Imperial Knight]]s, and were considered to be Gray Jedi by the Jedi Order.<ref name="Leg0" /><ref name="Leg0.5" /> The Imperial Knights served the [[Fel Empire|Empire]] for three generations.<ref name="Leg33" /> During the [[Sith–Imperial War]] in [[127 ABY]], [[Emperor/Legends|Emperor]] [[Roan Fel]] refused to allow the Imperial Knights to participate in the conflict for fear that they would fall to the dark side,<ref name="Leg8">''[[Legacy 8: Allies]]''</ref> and they instead served as his personal [[Bodyguard/Legends|bodyguards]].<ref name="LECG">''[[Legacy Era Campaign Guide]]''</ref> When [[Darth Krayt]], leader of the [[One Sith]], [[Attack on Emperor Fel|plotted to assassinate]] Fel at the conclusion of the war, four Imperial Knights acted as decoys for the Emperor and were killed as Fel made his escape.<ref name="Leg8" /> [[137 ABY|Seven years later]], Emperor Fel reappeared on the planet [[Bastion/Legends|Bastion]], where he founded the [[Empire-in-exile]] and initiated the [[Second Imperial Civil War]], in which the Imperial Knights were a major factor.<ref>''[[Legacy 3: Broken, Part 3]]''</ref> Imperial Knights participated in the [[Battle on Had Abbadon|assassination attempt]] against [[Darth/Legends|Darth]] Krayt on [[Had Abbadon]].<ref>''[[Legacy 31: Vector, Part 12]]''</ref>
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Some time after [[41 ABY]], when [[Jagged Fel]] was selected as the [[Head of State/Legends|Head of State]] of the [[Imperial Remnant|Galactic Empire]],<ref>''[[Legacy of the Force: Invincible]]''</ref> a sect of [[Force-sensitive/Legends|Force-users]] modeled after the Jedi Order and loyal to the Empire was established.<ref name="Leg33">''[[Legacy 33: Fight Another Day, Part 2]]''</ref> The members of this organization became known as [[Imperial Knight]]s, and were considered to be Gray Jedi by the Jedi Order.<ref name="Leg0">''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0]]''</ref><ref name="Leg0.5">''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0½]]''</ref> The Imperial Knights served the [[Fel Empire|Empire]] for three generations.<ref name="Leg33" /> During the [[Sith–Imperial War]] in [[127 ABY]], [[Emperor/Legends|Emperor]] [[Roan Fel]] refused to allow the Imperial Knights to participate in the conflict for fear that they would fall to the dark side,<ref name="Leg8">''[[Legacy 8: Allies]]''</ref> and they instead served as his personal [[Bodyguard/Legends|bodyguards]].<ref name="LECG">''[[Legacy Era Campaign Guide]]''</ref> When [[Darth Krayt]], leader of the [[One Sith]], [[Attack on Emperor Fel|plotted to assassinate]] Fel at the conclusion of the war, four Imperial Knights acted as decoys for the Emperor and were killed as Fel made his escape.<ref name="Leg8" /> [[137 ABY|Seven years later]], Emperor Fel reappeared on the planet [[Bastion/Legends|Bastion]], where he founded the [[Empire-in-exile]] and initiated the [[Second Imperial Civil War]], in which the Imperial Knights were a major factor.<ref>''[[Legacy 3: Broken, Part 3]]''</ref> Imperial Knights participated in the [[Battle on Had Abbadon|assassination attempt]] against [[Darth/Legends|Darth]] Krayt on [[Had Abbadon]].<ref>''[[Legacy 31: Vector, Part 12]]''</ref>
   
 
==Traits and techniques==
 
==Traits and techniques==
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Gray Jedi called on the dark side of the Force, but were not corrupted by it and did not embrace it entirely.<ref name="Leg0" /><ref name="JATM" /> In fact, some Gray Jedi opposed those who embraced the dark side; Bindo fought against the Sith Empire during the Great Sith War and again during the Jedi Civil War.<ref name="KotOR" /> While Gray Jedi displayed a lack of adherence to the [[Light side of the Force/Legends|light side of the Force]], they were free of dark side corruption;<ref name="Leg0.5" /> beings who were corrupted by the dark side were not considered to be Gray Jedi&mdash;nor were Jedi who fell to the dark side and were later redeemed. Still, some Jedi thought that Gray Jedi carried the dark side's influence within them, even if the Gray Jedi did not always realize it.<ref name="JATM" /> The term did not refer to Force-users who believed there was no dark side of the Force, as such individuals were instead followers of the [[Potentium]].<ref name="JvsS">[[Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force (real-life book)|''Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force'']]</ref>
 
Gray Jedi called on the dark side of the Force, but were not corrupted by it and did not embrace it entirely.<ref name="Leg0" /><ref name="JATM" /> In fact, some Gray Jedi opposed those who embraced the dark side; Bindo fought against the Sith Empire during the Great Sith War and again during the Jedi Civil War.<ref name="KotOR" /> While Gray Jedi displayed a lack of adherence to the [[Light side of the Force/Legends|light side of the Force]], they were free of dark side corruption;<ref name="Leg0.5" /> beings who were corrupted by the dark side were not considered to be Gray Jedi&mdash;nor were Jedi who fell to the dark side and were later redeemed. Still, some Jedi thought that Gray Jedi carried the dark side's influence within them, even if the Gray Jedi did not always realize it.<ref name="JATM" /> The term did not refer to Force-users who believed there was no dark side of the Force, as such individuals were instead followers of the [[Potentium]].<ref name="JvsS">[[Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force (real-life book)|''Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force'']]</ref>
   
[[File:Jolee Bindo KotORCG.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Jolee Bindo controls a beast with the Force.]]
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[[File:Jolee Bindo KotORCG.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Jolee Bindo controls a beast with the Force.]]
 
All Gray Jedi displayed the use of both light and dark side Force abilities and demonstrated skill with techniques common to Jedi and Sith, such as the ability to construct and wield a [[Lightsaber/Legends|lightsaber]], as well as some unique Force talents.<ref name="JATM" /> Bindo acquitted himself for being talented with [[Mind trick/Legends|Jedi mind tricks]] and was capable of using dark side techniques such as [[Force lightning/Legends|Force lightning]].<ref name="KotOR" /> The Voss Mystics were [[Force healing/Legends|healers]], and were also extremely adept at prophecy, although they could not control when they would receive their Force visions.<ref name="Voss" /> The Jensaarai were capable of masking their presence in the Force, which allowed them to evade Jedi, as well as Palpatine's [[Jedi hunter/Legends|Jedi hunters]]. They were also capable of a unique form of [[Telekinesis/Legends|Force throw]] that allowed the user to hurl small objects toward enemies at near-lethal velocity.<ref name="I, Jedi" /> The Imperial Knights were just as capable in the use of the Force as [[Jedi Knight/Legends|Jedi Knights]], though their training concentrated more on martial prowess.<ref name="LECG" /> Imperial Knights displayed various Force abilities, such as self-levitation,<ref name="Leg8" /> telekinesis,<ref>''[[Legacy 10: Trust Issues, Part 2]]''</ref> and mind tricks.<ref>''[[Legacy 24: Loyalties, Part 2]]''</ref> Both the Jensaarai and the Imperial Knights utilized [[Armor/Legends|armor]] in combat, and were familiar with the process of manipulating [[Cortosis/Legends|cortosis]] [[Ore/Legends|ore]].<ref name="I, Jedi" /><ref>''[[Legacy 13: Ready to Die]]''</ref> Other Gray Jedi wielded powers such as [[Ionize]], a technique that deactivated and destroyed machines, and Force thrust,<ref name="KotORCG" /> a telekinetic attack similar to Force push.<ref>''[[Star Wars Roleplaying Game Saga Edition Core Rulebook]]''</ref>
 
All Gray Jedi displayed the use of both light and dark side Force abilities and demonstrated skill with techniques common to Jedi and Sith, such as the ability to construct and wield a [[Lightsaber/Legends|lightsaber]], as well as some unique Force talents.<ref name="JATM" /> Bindo acquitted himself for being talented with [[Mind trick/Legends|Jedi mind tricks]] and was capable of using dark side techniques such as [[Force lightning/Legends|Force lightning]].<ref name="KotOR" /> The Voss Mystics were [[Force healing/Legends|healers]], and were also extremely adept at prophecy, although they could not control when they would receive their Force visions.<ref name="Voss" /> The Jensaarai were capable of masking their presence in the Force, which allowed them to evade Jedi, as well as Palpatine's [[Jedi hunter/Legends|Jedi hunters]]. They were also capable of a unique form of [[Telekinesis/Legends|Force throw]] that allowed the user to hurl small objects toward enemies at near-lethal velocity.<ref name="I, Jedi" /> The Imperial Knights were just as capable in the use of the Force as [[Jedi Knight/Legends|Jedi Knights]], though their training concentrated more on martial prowess.<ref name="LECG" /> Imperial Knights displayed various Force abilities, such as self-levitation,<ref name="Leg8" /> telekinesis,<ref>''[[Legacy 10: Trust Issues, Part 2]]''</ref> and mind tricks.<ref>''[[Legacy 24: Loyalties, Part 2]]''</ref> Both the Jensaarai and the Imperial Knights utilized [[Armor/Legends|armor]] in combat, and were familiar with the process of manipulating [[Cortosis/Legends|cortosis]] [[Ore/Legends|ore]].<ref name="I, Jedi" /><ref>''[[Legacy 13: Ready to Die]]''</ref> Other Gray Jedi wielded powers such as [[Ionize]], a technique that deactivated and destroyed machines, and Force thrust,<ref name="KotORCG" /> a telekinetic attack similar to Force push.<ref>''[[Star Wars Roleplaying Game Saga Edition Core Rulebook]]''</ref>
   
However, the use of both light side and dark side powers was not, in itself, evidence of the individual being a Gray Jedi. Shortly after the [[Stark Hyperspace War/Legends|Stark Hyperspace War]] in [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], [[Plo Koon/Legends|Plo Koon]], a light side [[Kel Dor/Legends|Kel Dor]] Jedi Master and member of the Jedi High Council, spontaneously used a Force technique that bore a striking similarity to the dark-side-aligned Force lightning, which he coined [[Electric Judgment]].<ref>''[[Star Wars: Episode I Jedi Power Battles]]''</ref> Koon struggled with the morality of the use of this power, and acknowledged the concern of other Jedi over the matter, but ultimately deemed it acceptable.<ref name="JvsS" /> Similarly, [[Kyle Katarn]], a light side Jedi who later became a member of the [[Jedi High Council (New Jedi Order)|New Jedi Order's High Council]], freely used light and dark side abilities, and encouraged his students&mdash;[[Rosh Penin]] and [[Jaden Korr]]&mdash;to think of Force powers as mere tools.<ref>''[[Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy]]''</ref>
+
However, the use of both light side and dark side powers was not, in itself, evidence of the individual being a Gray Jedi. Shortly after the [[Stark Hyperspace War/Legends|Stark Hyperspace War]] in [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], [[Plo Koon/Legends|Plo Koon]], a light side [[Kel Dor/Legends|Kel Dor]] Jedi Master and member of the Jedi High Council, spontaneously used a Force technique that bore a striking similarity to the dark-side-aligned Force lightning, which he coined [[Electric Judgment]].<ref>''[[Star Wars: Episode I Jedi Power Battles]]''</ref> Koon struggled with the morality of the use of this power, and acknowledged the concern of other Jedi over the matter, but ultimately deemed it acceptable.<ref name="JvsS" /> Similarly, [[Kyle Katarn/Legends|Kyle Katarn]], a light side Jedi who later became a member of the [[Jedi High Council (New Jedi Order)|New Jedi Order's High Council]], freely used light and dark side abilities, and encouraged his students&mdash;[[Rosh Penin]] and [[Jaden Korr]]&mdash;to think of Force powers as mere tools.<ref>''[[Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy]]''</ref>
   
 
==Relationship with the Council==
 
==Relationship with the Council==
[[File:Qui-Gon Jinn.png|right|thumb|275px|Some members of the Jedi Order considered Qui-Gon Jinn to be a Gray Jedi.]]
+
[[File:Qui-Gon Jinn.png|thumb|right|275px|Some members of the Jedi Order considered Qui-Gon Jinn to be a Gray Jedi.]]
 
{{Quote|If you would just follow the Code, you would be on the Council. They will not go along with you this time.''"<br />"''You still have much to learn, my young apprentice.|Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn|Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace}}
 
{{Quote|If you would just follow the Code, you would be on the Council. They will not go along with you this time.''"<br />"''You still have much to learn, my young apprentice.|Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn|Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace}}
 
While the term was used to refer to Force-users who walked the line between light and dark, Jedi were also labeled as Gray Jedi for distancing themselves from the Jedi High Council. This practice dated back to the days of the Old Republic, when the High Council was attempting to consolidate power.<ref name="JATM" /> Jedi who frequently clashed with the will of the Council were sometimes thought of as Gray, even if they did not necessarily walk the line between the light and dark sides of the Force. Around [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent opposition to their demands.<ref name="Stark" /><ref name="TJP" />
 
While the term was used to refer to Force-users who walked the line between light and dark, Jedi were also labeled as Gray Jedi for distancing themselves from the Jedi High Council. This practice dated back to the days of the Old Republic, when the High Council was attempting to consolidate power.<ref name="JATM" /> Jedi who frequently clashed with the will of the Council were sometimes thought of as Gray, even if they did not necessarily walk the line between the light and dark sides of the Force. Around [[44 BBY/Legends|44 BBY]], Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent opposition to their demands.<ref name="Stark" /><ref name="TJP" />
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[[File:Jolee-Portrait.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Jolee Bindo, self-proclaimed Gray Jedi of the Old Republic]]
 
[[File:Jolee-Portrait.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Jolee Bindo, self-proclaimed Gray Jedi of the Old Republic]]
 
{{Quote|Well, I assure you, I see more grey than dark or light. I'm just a stubborn old man, tired of the foolishness of others.|Jolee Bindo, to Revan, in the Shadowlands of Kashyyyk|Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic}}
 
{{Quote|Well, I assure you, I see more grey than dark or light. I'm just a stubborn old man, tired of the foolishness of others.|Jolee Bindo, to Revan, in the Shadowlands of Kashyyyk|Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic}}
Jolee Bindo was a [[Human/Legends|Human]] [[Sexes/Legends|male]] Jedi who lived circa [[4000 BBY]]. In his youth, Bindo developed a relationship with a Human female [[Mercenary/Legends|mercenary]] named [[Nayama]] and [[Marriage/Legends|married]] her against the Order's Code. This infraction led to the creation of the phrase "[[List of phrases and slang/Legends#P|pulling a Bindo]]." Bindo realized that Nayama was strong in the Force and attempted to train her despite still only being a Padawan in the Jedi Order himself. When the Sith Lord Exar Kun initiated the Great Sith War, Nayama asked Bindo to follow her in joining Kun's [[Brotherhood of the Sith]]. When Bindo refused, she attacked him. Realizing that Nayama had fallen to the dark side, Bindo [[Duel with Nayama|dueled]] and defeated her, but could not bring himself to kill her. She went on to kill many Jedi during the war until she was slain in the war's [[Battle of Yavin 4 (Great Sith War)|final battle]] on [[Yavin 4/Legends|Yavin 4]].<ref name="KotOR" />
+
Jolee Bindo was a [[Human/Legends|Human]] [[Sexes/Legends|male]] Jedi who lived circa [[4000 BBY/Legends|4000 BBY]]. In his youth, Bindo developed a relationship with a Human female [[Mercenary/Legends|mercenary]] named [[Nayama]] and [[Marriage/Legends|married]] her against the Order's Code. This infraction led to the creation of the phrase "[[List of phrases and slang/Legends#P|pulling a Bindo]]." Bindo realized that Nayama was strong in the Force and attempted to train her despite still only being a Padawan in the Jedi Order himself. When the Sith Lord Exar Kun initiated the Great Sith War, Nayama asked Bindo to follow her in joining Kun's [[Brotherhood of the Sith]]. When Bindo refused, she attacked him. Realizing that Nayama had fallen to the dark side, Bindo [[Duel with Nayama|dueled]] and defeated her, but could not bring himself to kill her. She went on to kill many Jedi during the war until she was slain in the war's [[Battle of Yavin 4 (Great Sith War)|final battle]] on [[Yavin 4/Legends|Yavin 4]].<ref name="KotOR" />
   
 
Bindo was put on trial by the Jedi Council after the war, both to explore his culpability in regard to Nayama's actions, and to evaluate his place in the Order. When they forgave him of any blame and attempted to elevate him from the rank of Padawan to that of Knight, the guilt-ridden Bindo felt that the Order had failed him, and he separated himself from the Jedi Order entirely. He operated as a [[Smuggler/Legends|smuggler]] in the [[Outer Rim Territories/Legends|Outer Rim Territories]] until he crashed on [[Kashyyyk/Legends|Kashyyyk]], where he remained in self-imposed [[Exile (punishment)/Legends|exile]]. Near the end of the Jedi Civil War, he met the Jedi Revan in the [[Shadowlands/Legends|Shadowlands]] of Kashyyyk and joined him in the campaign against the Dark Lord Darth Malak. Bindo was awarded the Cross of Glory for his part in the defeat of the Sith Empire. He was a self-described Gray Jedi.<ref name="KotOR" />
 
Bindo was put on trial by the Jedi Council after the war, both to explore his culpability in regard to Nayama's actions, and to evaluate his place in the Order. When they forgave him of any blame and attempted to elevate him from the rank of Padawan to that of Knight, the guilt-ridden Bindo felt that the Order had failed him, and he separated himself from the Jedi Order entirely. He operated as a [[Smuggler/Legends|smuggler]] in the [[Outer Rim Territories/Legends|Outer Rim Territories]] until he crashed on [[Kashyyyk/Legends|Kashyyyk]], where he remained in self-imposed [[Exile (punishment)/Legends|exile]]. Near the end of the Jedi Civil War, he met the Jedi Revan in the [[Shadowlands/Legends|Shadowlands]] of Kashyyyk and joined him in the campaign against the Dark Lord Darth Malak. Bindo was awarded the Cross of Glory for his part in the defeat of the Sith Empire. He was a self-described Gray Jedi.<ref name="KotOR" />
 
===The Voss Mystics===
 
{{Main|Voss Mystics}}
 
[[File:Voss male.jpg|thumb|left|150px|A Voss Mystic]]
 
{{Quote|The Mystics are not Jedi or Sith. Their power is raw, unchecked.|Knight Wen, member of the Jedi Order circa 3,643 BBY|Star Wars: The Old Republic}}
 
The Voss Mystics were the totalitarian leaders of the Voss species, native to the planet of the same name in the [[Voss system]] of the [[Outer Rim Territories/Legends|Outer Rim Territories]]' [[Allied Tion sector]]. Although they did not settle on Voss or become the Voss Mystics until much later, this order of Force mystics was as old as the Galactic Republic itself.<ref name="Creating" /> Voss Mystics were seers and healers who protected the Voss from the Gormak, a tech-savvy race of [[Humanoid/Legends|humanoids]] who were extremely hostile to the Voss,<ref name="Voss" /> believing that they must be destroyed for the Gormak to thrive.<ref>{{Holonet|inhabitants|gormak|Gormak}}</ref> The Voss Mystics came into contact with the Galactic Republic and the Sith Empire shortly after the end of the [[Great Galactic War]] in 3,653 BBY, following the Treaty of Coruscant.<ref name="Creating" />
 
 
The Mystics were able to pierce the deceptive teachings of the Sith, but were seen as dangerous by the Jedi.<ref name="Creating" /> They were uninterested in the teachings of either Order<ref name="Voss" /> and were considered to be Gray by both. They had a fundamentally different understanding of the Force and believed themselves to be its chosen people. Though their rule was totalitarian, they were considered by their subjects to be as infallible as their visions. Despite the fact that they could not control when these visions appeared, their commands were never questioned, and Voss society was generally happy with their rule.<ref name="Creating" />
 
   
 
===The Jensaarai===
 
===The Jensaarai===
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Later sources conflicted with each other over the defining characteristic of a Gray Jedi. ''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0]]'', the ''[[Knights of the Old Republic Campaign Guide]]'', and [[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']] gave definitions that focused on separation from the Jedi High Council. Also, the ''[[Coruscant Nights I: Jedi Twilight]]'' novel introduced a group of renegade Jedi called the "Gray Paladins" that was portrayed as removed from the Order yet devoid of dark side influences or practices. However, ''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0½]]'' and the ''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]'' claimed that the term was used to describe those who dabbled in the dark side without becoming corrupted by it.
 
Later sources conflicted with each other over the defining characteristic of a Gray Jedi. ''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0]]'', the ''[[Knights of the Old Republic Campaign Guide]]'', and [[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']] gave definitions that focused on separation from the Jedi High Council. Also, the ''[[Coruscant Nights I: Jedi Twilight]]'' novel introduced a group of renegade Jedi called the "Gray Paladins" that was portrayed as removed from the Order yet devoid of dark side influences or practices. However, ''[[Star Wars: Legacy 0½]]'' and the ''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]'' claimed that the term was used to describe those who dabbled in the dark side without becoming corrupted by it.
   
A definition for "true Gray Jedi" that appeared in the ''Jedi Academy Training Manual'' described them as those who did not belong to any Force-based organization and who explored both the light and the dark sides of the Force without becoming corrupted by the dark side. Despite this, it was also stated in the ''Jedi Academy Training Manual'' that the New Jedi Order considered the entire Force tradition of the Jensaarai to be Gray. Additionally, the Imperial Knights were confirmed to have been considered as Gray by the New Jedi Order in ''Star Wars: Legacy 0'' and ''Star Wars: Legacy 0½'', and the Voss Mystics were verified to have been Gray in the "[http://www.swtor.com/news/blog/20100514_001 Creating Worlds]" developer blog for the ''[[Star Wars: The Old Republic]]'' video game.
+
A definition for "true Gray Jedi" that appeared in the ''Jedi Academy Training Manual'' described them as those who did not belong to any Force-based organization and who explored both the light and the dark sides of the Force without becoming corrupted by the dark side. Despite this, it was also stated in the ''Jedi Academy Training Manual'' that the New Jedi Order considered the entire Force tradition of the Jensaarai to be Gray. Additionally, the Imperial Knights were confirmed to have been considered as Gray by the New Jedi Order in ''Star Wars: Legacy 0'' and ''Star Wars: Legacy 0½'', and the Voss Mystics were verified to have been Gray in the "[http://www.swtor.com/news/blog/20100514_001 Creating Worlds]" developer blog for the ''[[Star Wars: The Old Republic]]'' video game.<ref name="Creating" />
   
 
==Appearances==
 
==Appearances==
{{Imagecat|Images of Gray Jedi}}
+
{{Mediacat|imagecat=Images of Gray Jedi}}
 
*''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic]]'' {{1st}}
 
*''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic]]'' {{1st}}
 
*''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]'' {{Mo}}
 
*''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]'' {{Mo}}
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*''[[Legacy Era Campaign Guide]]''
 
*''[[Legacy Era Campaign Guide]]''
 
*''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]''
 
*''[[Jedi Academy Training Manual]]''
*[http://www.swtor.com/news/blog/20100514_001 Star Wars: The Old Republic | News & Updates, Developer Blogs - "Creating Worlds"]
+
*{{TORweb|url=news/blog/20100514_001|text=Creating Worlds|nobackup=1}}
 
*[[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']]
 
*[[The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force (real-life book)|''The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force'']]
   
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|de=Graue Jedi#legends
 
|de=Graue Jedi#legends
 
|es=Jedi gris
 
|es=Jedi gris
 
|ko=회색의 제다이
 
|ru=Серый джедай
 
|ru=Серый джедай
 
|sv=Grå Jedi
 
|sv=Grå Jedi
  +
|tr=Gri Jedi
|ko=회색의 제다이
 
 
}}
 
}}
   
[[Category:Force-based organizations]]
 
 
[[Category:Gray Jedi| ]]
 
[[Category:Gray Jedi| ]]

Revision as of 21:24, 5 March 2021

"Jinn always does things his own way, always sure he is right, always incredulous if we do not see it his way. Some think he is a gray Jedi."
―Tyvokka, on Qui-Gon Jinn[src]

The term Gray Jedi, or Gray, had two meanings. First, it was used by Jedi and Sith to describe Force-users who walked the line between the light and dark sides of the Force without surrendering to the dark side, and second, it described Jedi who distanced themselves from the Jedi High Council and operated outside the strictures of the Jedi Code. However, those who were considered to be true Gray Jedi met both qualifications and did not belong to any particular Force tradition. One example was Jolee Bindo, a former Jedi Padawan and a Gray Jedi that served the Old Republic.

Although the term did not directly refer to those who were capable of using both light and dark side Force abilities, all Gray Jedi could do so. The term was similar to that of "Dark Jedi" in that it could refer to any Force-user, and not only to Jedi.

The term was sometimes used to refer to unorthodox or dissident Jedi who did not meet the strictest requirements of being a Gray Jedi. For example, the Jedi Qui-Gon Jinn was thought of by some members of the Jedi Order as a Gray Jedi for his disagreements with the High Council. A group of renegade Jedi called the Gray Paladins used the term this way to describe themselves - they advocated minimal reliance on the Force and the use of blasters, but otherwise held to the Jedi Code.

The term dated back as far as the Old Sith Wars, when the High Council attempted to consolidate their power and centralize the Order. Some Jedi felt that the Council did not have the authority to reinterpret the Jedi Code, and considered themselves beholden only to the Force. These early Gray Jedi clashed with the Council over new strictures of the Code, such as those barring attachment or restricting training. During this time period, Gray Jedi became associated with a certain variety of robe; Bindo wore a version of these robes. The term was later used by the New Jedi Order to refer to entire Force traditions that held views which differed from that of the Jedi, but did not embrace the dark side. The Jensaarai and the Imperial Knights were two such organizations.

History

Great Sith War – Cold War

"If we're going to have a Jedi Council at all, then somebody, somewhere, is going to do what it tells them!"
―Master Vrook Lamar, member of the Dantooine Jedi Conclave Council, and then of the Jedi High Council[src]

In the days of the Old Republic, the Jedi Order was largely decentralized. At this time, Jedi academies were spread throughout the galaxy. Jedi were also trained by individual Masters without the benefit of an academy. This decentralization meant that Jedi were accepted into the Order, trained, and Knighted without ever having to visit the galactic capital, Coruscant. Unlike the Jedi of later years, the Jedi at this time were fractious and unwilling to bow to their own central authority—the Jedi High Council.[1]

Atristrial

Atris, last survivor of the High Council after the First Jedi Purge, judging Meetra Surik in 3,959 BBY.

However, between the beginning of the Great Sith War in 4000 BBY and the end of the Dark Wars in 3951 BBY, the Jedi went from the height of their power to a mere remnant of their existence. As war repeatedly spread across the galaxy, some Jedi came to believe that a strong central authority was necessary. The Council, including such members as Vrook Lamar and Atris, revised the Jedi Code in order to consolidate their control over the Jedi Order and institute stricter standards on the conduct of its members. Despite the Council's actions, not all Jedi adhered to the revised Code. Some objected to several of the new strictures, such as those that barred the training of any Jedi hopeful over the age of four, that prevented Jedi from having families,[1] and that restricted the use of Force abilities associated with the dark side.[2] These individuals frequently clashed with the Jedi Council, and were known as Gray Jedi to the Jedi[1] and the Sith.[2]

The Jedi Padawan Jolee Bindo fought for the Galactic Republic in the Great Sith War against the Sith Lord Exar Kun, who sought to establish a new Golden Age of the Sith. After the war ended in 3996 BBY, Bindo abandoned the Jedi Order and became a Gray Jedi. In 3956 BBY, Bindo again took part in major galactic events when he joined the amnesiac Jedi Revan and fought against Dark Lord of the Sith Darth Malak's Sith Empire until the end of the Jedi Civil War, after which he was officially recognized by the Galactic Republic for his actions.[3] Some Old Republic Gray Jedi wore custom, gray robes. Bindo once wore a unique version of these robes.[4]

During the Cold War between the Galactic Republic and the reconstituted Sith Empire, shortly after the implementation of the Treaty of Coruscant in 3653 BBY, the Voss species was discovered on the planet of the same name. Voss society, isolated in the mountain-top fortress of Voss-Ka,[5] was led by the totalitarian control of the Voss Mystics, who were considered to be Gray by the Jedi and the Sith.[6] Led by the visions of the Mystics, the Voss had been defending their capital city from the assault of the hostile Gormak species for centuries before they revealed themselves to the larger galaxy by foiling occupation plots by both the Republic and the Empire. Both galactic governments then established embassies in Voss-Ka. The Voss Mystics rejected the offering of teaching from the Jedi and Sith in favor of their own dogma.[5]

New Sith Wars – Second Imperial Civil War

"The so-called gray Jedi have been with us since the beginning. Although they do not break with the Jedi orthodoxy concerning the dark side, they bristle when asked to take orders from the Council. Gray Jedi make compromises, cut corners, and hide their actions from scrutiny, all under the assumption that their experience makes them authorities on policy. They are mavericks who are difficult to control, but can be valued members of the Order after they have been persuaded to follow the established hierarchy."
―Restelly Quist, Jedi Chief Librarian following the New Sith Wars[src]

Shortly after the end of the New Sith Wars and the Ruusan Reformations in 1000 BBY, the Jedi Chief Librarian Restelly Quist wrote about Gray Jedi in the Jedi training manual The Jedi Path. Quist described Gray Jedi as mavericks and classified them as a threat to Jedi teachings.[7]

Njo kubisnu

Kelbis Nu, Jensaarai and Jedi Knight

Centuries later, during the Stark Hyperspace War in 44 BBY, some Jedi were considered as Gray simply for clashing with the High Council, not necessarily for experimenting with the dark side. The Jedi Qui-Gon Jinn was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent disagreements with the Council. Jedi Master Tyvokka expressed concern over this[8] and Master Obi-Wan Kenobi confessed that he could see why some might view Jinn as a Gray Jedi.[7] A faction of dissident Jedi at this time used the term "gray" to describe themselves despite their dedication to the Jedi Code. This group, the Gray Paladins, was an offshoot of the Teepo Paladins.[9]

Around 19 BBY, near the end of the Clone Wars, a new sect of Gray Jedi was inadvertently created when Jedi Master Nejaa Halcyon led a strike team to Susevfi to confront the fallen Jedi Nikkos Tyris and his followers.[10] Tyris had been studying the writings of Larad Noon, a Sith follower of Kun's during the Old Sith Wars.[11] Tyris and his most elite followers were killed by the Jedi strike team, but there were other members of the cult of whom the Jedi had not been aware and who survived the attack. These survivors were unable to interpret the advanced dark side teachings in Noon's writings and instead developed a unique Force tradition known as the Jensaarai. When the Galactic Empire came to power, some Jensaarai offered their services to Emperor Palpatine and were slain. In response, the Jensaarai retreated into hiding. They re-emerged in 11 ABY and became allies with the New Jedi Order.[10] While the New Jedi Order was willing to accept Jensaarai students at the Jedi Praxeum, they considered the entire order to be Gray Jedi, although the Jensaarai outwardly denied these claims.[2] Kelbis Nu, a Jensaarai who was later trained as a Jedi, participated in the Yuuzhan Vong War in 26 ABY.[12]

Some time after 41 ABY, when Jagged Fel was selected as the Head of State of the Galactic Empire,[13] a sect of Force-users modeled after the Jedi Order and loyal to the Empire was established.[14] The members of this organization became known as Imperial Knights, and were considered to be Gray Jedi by the Jedi Order.[15][16] The Imperial Knights served the Empire for three generations.[14] During the Sith–Imperial War in 127 ABY, Emperor Roan Fel refused to allow the Imperial Knights to participate in the conflict for fear that they would fall to the dark side,[17] and they instead served as his personal bodyguards.[18] When Darth Krayt, leader of the One Sith, plotted to assassinate Fel at the conclusion of the war, four Imperial Knights acted as decoys for the Emperor and were killed as Fel made his escape.[17] Seven years later, Emperor Fel reappeared on the planet Bastion, where he founded the Empire-in-exile and initiated the Second Imperial Civil War, in which the Imperial Knights were a major factor.[19] Imperial Knights participated in the assassination attempt against Darth Krayt on Had Abbadon.[20]

Traits and techniques

"Ah, and it makes you think I may have the taint of the dark side in me, doesn't it? Ooh. Is that what you are wondering, huh? Ooh."
―Jolee Bindo — (audio) Listen (file info)[src]

Gray Jedi called on the dark side of the Force, but were not corrupted by it and did not embrace it entirely.[15][2] In fact, some Gray Jedi opposed those who embraced the dark side; Bindo fought against the Sith Empire during the Great Sith War and again during the Jedi Civil War.[3] While Gray Jedi displayed a lack of adherence to the light side of the Force, they were free of dark side corruption;[16] beings who were corrupted by the dark side were not considered to be Gray Jedi—nor were Jedi who fell to the dark side and were later redeemed. Still, some Jedi thought that Gray Jedi carried the dark side's influence within them, even if the Gray Jedi did not always realize it.[2] The term did not refer to Force-users who believed there was no dark side of the Force, as such individuals were instead followers of the Potentium.[21]

File:Jolee Bindo KotORCG.jpg

Jolee Bindo controls a beast with the Force.

All Gray Jedi displayed the use of both light and dark side Force abilities and demonstrated skill with techniques common to Jedi and Sith, such as the ability to construct and wield a lightsaber, as well as some unique Force talents.[2] Bindo acquitted himself for being talented with Jedi mind tricks and was capable of using dark side techniques such as Force lightning.[3] The Voss Mystics were healers, and were also extremely adept at prophecy, although they could not control when they would receive their Force visions.[5] The Jensaarai were capable of masking their presence in the Force, which allowed them to evade Jedi, as well as Palpatine's Jedi hunters. They were also capable of a unique form of Force throw that allowed the user to hurl small objects toward enemies at near-lethal velocity.[10] The Imperial Knights were just as capable in the use of the Force as Jedi Knights, though their training concentrated more on martial prowess.[18] Imperial Knights displayed various Force abilities, such as self-levitation,[17] telekinesis,[22] and mind tricks.[23] Both the Jensaarai and the Imperial Knights utilized armor in combat, and were familiar with the process of manipulating cortosis ore.[10][24] Other Gray Jedi wielded powers such as Ionize, a technique that deactivated and destroyed machines, and Force thrust,[1] a telekinetic attack similar to Force push.[25]

However, the use of both light side and dark side powers was not, in itself, evidence of the individual being a Gray Jedi. Shortly after the Stark Hyperspace War in 44 BBY, Plo Koon, a light side Kel Dor Jedi Master and member of the Jedi High Council, spontaneously used a Force technique that bore a striking similarity to the dark-side-aligned Force lightning, which he coined Electric Judgment.[26] Koon struggled with the morality of the use of this power, and acknowledged the concern of other Jedi over the matter, but ultimately deemed it acceptable.[21] Similarly, Kyle Katarn, a light side Jedi who later became a member of the New Jedi Order's High Council, freely used light and dark side abilities, and encouraged his students—Rosh Penin and Jaden Korr—to think of Force powers as mere tools.[27]

Relationship with the Council

Qui-Gon Jinn

Some members of the Jedi Order considered Qui-Gon Jinn to be a Gray Jedi.

"If you would just follow the Code, you would be on the Council. They will not go along with you this time."
"You still have much to learn, my young apprentice."
―Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn[src]

While the term was used to refer to Force-users who walked the line between light and dark, Jedi were also labeled as Gray Jedi for distancing themselves from the Jedi High Council. This practice dated back to the days of the Old Republic, when the High Council was attempting to consolidate power.[2] Jedi who frequently clashed with the will of the Council were sometimes thought of as Gray, even if they did not necessarily walk the line between the light and dark sides of the Force. Around 44 BBY, Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn was thought of as a Gray Jedi by some members of the Order for his frequent opposition to their demands.[8][7]

One group of renegade Jedi described themselves as "gray" even though they held to the same views as the Jedi Council on the subject of the dark side.[9] The Teepo Paladins were Jedi who were removed from the Order for advocating the use of a wide variety of weapons—including blasters—rather than restricting the weaponry of Jedi to lightsabers, and from them splintered a group that called themselves the "Gray Paladins." This group preached minimal reliance on the Force and advocated a more militaristic lifestyle than either the mainstream Jedi Order or the Teepo Paladins.[28] Despite these differences, some non-Jedi, such as the Jedi Hunter Aurra Sing, viewed Gray Paladins simply as Jedi.[9]

It was difficult for unorthodox Jedi—especially those labeled as Gray Jedi—to join the Council or ascend to any position of real leadership within the Order. As the High Council chose its own members, they tended to select more traditionalist Jedi, such as the group described as the Old Guard. Jinn's candidacy as a member of the High Council was rejected first in favor of Plo Koon, and later the Cerean Ki-Adi-Mundi, both of whom were more in line with the Council's way of thinking.[29]

Gray Jedi

Jolee Bindo

Jolee-Portrait

Jolee Bindo, self-proclaimed Gray Jedi of the Old Republic

"Well, I assure you, I see more grey than dark or light. I'm just a stubborn old man, tired of the foolishness of others."
―Jolee Bindo, to Revan, in the Shadowlands of Kashyyyk[src]

Jolee Bindo was a Human male Jedi who lived circa 4000 BBY. In his youth, Bindo developed a relationship with a Human female mercenary named Nayama and married her against the Order's Code. This infraction led to the creation of the phrase "pulling a Bindo." Bindo realized that Nayama was strong in the Force and attempted to train her despite still only being a Padawan in the Jedi Order himself. When the Sith Lord Exar Kun initiated the Great Sith War, Nayama asked Bindo to follow her in joining Kun's Brotherhood of the Sith. When Bindo refused, she attacked him. Realizing that Nayama had fallen to the dark side, Bindo dueled and defeated her, but could not bring himself to kill her. She went on to kill many Jedi during the war until she was slain in the war's final battle on Yavin 4.[3]

Bindo was put on trial by the Jedi Council after the war, both to explore his culpability in regard to Nayama's actions, and to evaluate his place in the Order. When they forgave him of any blame and attempted to elevate him from the rank of Padawan to that of Knight, the guilt-ridden Bindo felt that the Order had failed him, and he separated himself from the Jedi Order entirely. He operated as a smuggler in the Outer Rim Territories until he crashed on Kashyyyk, where he remained in self-imposed exile. Near the end of the Jedi Civil War, he met the Jedi Revan in the Shadowlands of Kashyyyk and joined him in the campaign against the Dark Lord Darth Malak. Bindo was awarded the Cross of Glory for his part in the defeat of the Sith Empire. He was a self-described Gray Jedi.[3]

The Jensaarai

Jensaarai-P157

A Jensaarai defender alongside a Jedi Knight

"We are not evil."
"No, the Jensaarai are not, nor are they wholly good."
―The Saarai-kaar and Luke Skywalker[src]

The Jensaarai were an order of Force-users from the Suarbi system who arose during the Clone Wars from the teachings of an Old Sith Wars–era Sith named Larad Noon.[11] Formed by the fallen Jedi Nikkos Tyris, the Jensaarai's philosophy and methodology was a blend of Sith and Jedi teachings, although they maintained the discipline necessary to resist corruption by the dark side and focused mostly on defensive tactics and Force abilities. After the death of Tyris at the hands of the Jedi Nejaa Halcyon, the succeeding leader of the Jensaarai—a Human female apprentice of Tyris' who went by the title Saarai-kaar—was unable to interpret the higher dark side teachings that Tyris had been studying. The Saarai-kaar taught her fellow Jensaarai what she did know, emphasizing the values of community defense and of avoiding confrontation. In doing so, she unwittingly led the Jensaarai away from darkness. At first, the Saarai-kaar opposed the Jedi, viewing them as an aggressive off-world threat due to the actions of Halcyon's strike team. However, after the fall of the Galactic Empire, the Jensaarai made peace with the New Jedi Order,[10] and even sent students to learn at Master Luke Skywalker's Jedi Praxeum on Yavin 4.[12] They were still considered Gray Jedi—by both the Jedi and the Sith—for the practices of certain members; however, the Jensaarai themselves outwardly denied these claims.[2]

The Imperial Knights

ImpKnightRookiees-L46

Imperial Knights of the Fel Empire

"As Imperial Knights, we obey the Emperor but only as long as he serves the light side of the Force."
―Ganner Krieg, an Imperial Knight[src]

The Imperial Knights were an order of Force-practitioners loyal to the Emperor of the Fel Empire. They were fully trained in the ways of the Force and rejected the dark side of the Force,[15] unlike some of the Force-based organizations of Emperor Palpatine's Galactic Empire, such as the Prophets of the Dark Side.[30] In contrast to the Jedi, who believed strongly in meditation and introspection, the Imperial Knights took a pragmatic view of the Force. To an Imperial Knight, the Force was a powerful tool that required care and respect.[18] Although they did not adhere to the dark side, they followed the light side indirectly through the figure of the Emperor, and were viewed as "Gray" by the Jedi Order.[16] During the Second Imperial Civil War circa 137 ABY, the Imperial Knights made alliances with both the Galactic Alliance Remnant[31] and the Jedi Council to oppose Darth Krayt's Galactic Empire.[32]

Behind the scenes

"Gray Jedi are those who, though having completed the teachings of the Jedi, operate independently and outside of the Jedi Council. They are typically seen as misguided, though they have not necessarily succumbed to the dark side."
―Gray Jedi Robe item description[src]

The term "Gray Jedi" was first used to describe the Jedi Qui-Gon Jinn in Star Wars: Republic: The Stark Hyperspace War, although the source did not confirm that Jinn was a Gray Jedi and did not provide an exact definition of the term. Jolee Bindo was later introduced in the Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic video game as a self-described Gray Jedi. In the game, Bindo's "Force alignment" was an even balance between the light and dark sides of the Force. However, an item called "Gray Jedi Robe" appeared in the game's sequel, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, which gave a definition for Gray Jedi that did not require a "balanced" Force alignment and instead focused on Jedi who operated independently of the Jedi Council without fully embracing the dark side.

Later sources conflicted with each other over the defining characteristic of a Gray Jedi. Star Wars: Legacy 0, the Knights of the Old Republic Campaign Guide, and The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force gave definitions that focused on separation from the Jedi High Council. Also, the Coruscant Nights I: Jedi Twilight novel introduced a group of renegade Jedi called the "Gray Paladins" that was portrayed as removed from the Order yet devoid of dark side influences or practices. However, Star Wars: Legacy 0½ and the Jedi Academy Training Manual claimed that the term was used to describe those who dabbled in the dark side without becoming corrupted by it.

A definition for "true Gray Jedi" that appeared in the Jedi Academy Training Manual described them as those who did not belong to any Force-based organization and who explored both the light and the dark sides of the Force without becoming corrupted by the dark side. Despite this, it was also stated in the Jedi Academy Training Manual that the New Jedi Order considered the entire Force tradition of the Jensaarai to be Gray. Additionally, the Imperial Knights were confirmed to have been considered as Gray by the New Jedi Order in Star Wars: Legacy 0 and Star Wars: Legacy 0½, and the Voss Mystics were verified to have been Gray in the "Creating Worlds" developer blog for the Star Wars: The Old Republic video game.[6]

Appearances

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Sources

Notes and references

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Knights of the Old Republic Campaign Guide
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Jedi Academy Training Manual
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
  4. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 SWTOR icon Voss on The Old Republic Holonet (backup link) (content now obsolete; original version)
  6. 6.0 6.1 SWTOR mini Creating Worlds on The Old Republic's official website (content obsolete and backup link not available)
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force
  8. 8.0 8.1 Star Wars 36: The Stark Hyperspace War, Part 1
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Coruscant Nights II: Street of Shadows
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 I, Jedi
  11. 11.0 11.1 HyperspaceIcon Evil Never Dies: The Sith Dynasties on Hyperspace (article) (content removed from StarWars.com; backup link)
  12. 12.0 12.1 The New Jedi Order: Edge of Victory II: Rebirth
  13. Legacy of the Force: Invincible
  14. 14.0 14.1 Legacy 33: Fight Another Day, Part 2
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Star Wars: Legacy 0
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Star Wars: Legacy 0½
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 Legacy 8: Allies
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Legacy Era Campaign Guide
  19. Legacy 3: Broken, Part 3
  20. Legacy 31: Vector, Part 12
  21. 21.0 21.1 Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force
  22. Legacy 10: Trust Issues, Part 2
  23. Legacy 24: Loyalties, Part 2
  24. Legacy 13: Ready to Die
  25. Star Wars Roleplaying Game Saga Edition Core Rulebook
  26. Star Wars: Episode I Jedi Power Battles
  27. Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy
  28. Coruscant Nights I: Jedi Twilight
  29. Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader
  30. The Dark Side Sourcebook
  31. Legacy 22: The Wrath of the Dragon
  32. Legacy 43: Monster, Part 1