Aniseya_Witch_Brendok_Luke_SkywalkerThe Acolyte has many Star Wars viewers scratching their heads with its new Force cult of witches, but I think I know who they are – courtesy of Star Wars Legends. The Acolyte episode 3 stepped back 16 years to reveal mysterious events that took place on Brendok, a remote Outer Rim world visited by four Jedi. There, the Jedi discovered an as-yet-unnamed coven of witches.

The Acolyte broke an old Star Wars tradition that primarily explores the Force through the lens of Jedi and Sith. It was told from the witches’ point-of-view, introducing the Force as a “Thread” that they drew upon, using it collectively to amplify their power. This concept feels very similar to one specific group of Force-wielders from the old Star Wars Legends timeline, created before Disney purchased Lucasfilm.

The Acolyte’s Force Cult Remind Me So Much Of The Fallanassi From Legends

A Reclusive Cult Of Force Powerful Women

The Coven of Brendok in Star Wars The Acolyte
Mother Aniseya (Jodie Turner-Smith) talking with Little Mae (Leah Brady) and Little Osha (Lauren Brady) about her meeting with the Jedi in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 An ancient witch of Brendok in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Mother Aniseya (Jodie Turner-Smith) and Mother Koril (Margarita Levieva) smiling to each other in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3
Mother Koril (Margarita Levieva) wielding the Force/the Thread in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3
The Coven of Brendok in Star Wars The Acolyte Mother Aniseya (Jodie Turner-Smith) talking with Little Mae (Leah Brady) and Little Osha (Lauren Brady) about her meeting with the Jedi in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 An ancient witch of Brendok in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Mother Aniseya (Jodie Turner-Smith) and Mother Koril (Margarita Levieva) smiling to each other in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Mother Koril (Margarita Levieva) wielding the Force/the Thread in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3

The 1996 novel Before the Storm by Michael P. Kube-McDowell introduced Star Wars readers to a Force-using group called the Fallanassi. The Fallanassi were persecuted by the Empire on top of already being reclusive, leading to them being viewed as a cult by many. But Before the Storm was just the first book in the Black Fleet Crisis trilogy, giving Kube-McDowell lots of time to establish this all-female group of Force-users as incredibly powerful in ways very different from the Jedi and Sith.

Just like the witches on Brendok, the Fallanassi are a reclusive all-female group of powerful Force-users, but the similarities don’t end there. The Fallanassi also refer to the Force by a different name, calling it the “White Current” and the dark side the “Dark Tide;” they are themselves sometimes called “Adepts of the White Current”. As the name implies, the White Current was viewed by the Fallanassi as a powerful current of water they could fully immerse themselves in, allowing for Force powers more oriented towards illusions, manipulations, and trickery.

Star Wars Canon Has Recently Brought The Fallanassi Back

The Last Jedi & The High Republic Reference The Fallanassi

Luke_Last_Jedi_Crait Fallanassi Sirené Star Wars Luke Skywalker confronts Kylo Ren on Crait Fallanassi Alliance With The Jedi Luke Skywalker with blue lightsaber in Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last JediLuke_Last_Jedi_Crait Fallanassi Sirené Star Wars Luke Skywalker confronts Kylo Ren on Crait
Fallanassi Alliance With The Jedi Luke Skywalker with blue lightsaber in Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi

The Fallanassi aren’t just in Legends, though, as they were first fully brought into canon through the Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker Visual Dictionary. This book confirmed that Luke Skywalker was in fact using a Fallanassi technique when he projected himself to the planet Crait in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, saving the Resistance. This means the Fallanassi are already a working part of the Star Wars galaxy, and have been for eons as Luke learned of this projection technique through the sacred ancient Jedi texts.

The Fallanassi have since made explicit appearances in canon, with Luke Skywalker meeting some non-practicing Fallanassi during his training as Jedi. They’ve also been seen in the High Republic Era, active on the sacred moon of Jedha, where Force-believers from across the galaxy made pilgrimages to. The Fallanassi there are fully able to use their projection and illusion-based powers, and even more – this is the same era of Star Wars that The Acolyte takes place in.

The Fallanassi Would Fit Perfectly With The Acolyte’s Themes

The Force Is Growing Out Of Balance

Osha and Sol looking in horror at the dead body of Aniseya in The Acolyte The Witches of Brendok lay dead in The Acolyte episode 3 The Jedi standing and speaking to the witches of Brendok in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Little Osha and Little Mae separated by a broken bridge in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Younger Master Sol (Lee Jung-jae) worried about Little Osha (Lauren Brady) after the fire in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3Osha and Sol looking in horror at the dead body of Aniseya in The Acolyte The Witches of Brendok lay dead in The Acolyte episode 3 The Jedi standing and speaking to the witches of Brendok in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Little Osha and Little Mae separated by a broken bridge in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3 Younger Master Sol (Lee Jung-jae) worried about Little Osha (Lauren Brady) after the fire in The Acolyte season 1 episode 3

The Acolyte showrunner Leslye Headlan is a devotee of Legends, which means she could well have borrowed an idea from there. According to Legends, the century before Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace saw several Force-cults like the Fallanassi emerging from the shadows. These groups were empowered and changed by the dark side of the Force, but were not Sith, though their emergence did concern the Sith in hiding during this period. This seems to be a perfect way the Fallanassi-like ideas could be integrated into the story of The Acolyte, and how they could be connected to the series’ witches of Brendok.

During this tumultuous time, the witches of Brendok were persecuted, as the series has already established that they were pushed out of whatever previous location they were based in. This could have been because of the witches’ tapping into the dark side – perhaps in attempting to create life – which caught the attention of the Sith. This could very well explain why the young Mae has been seemingly recruited by a Sith apprentice, and that The Acolyte‘s witches could really be inspired the Fallanassi of Legends.