144 Votes in Poll
“In my life, when you find people who need your help, you help them, no matter what.”
Her most iconic quote.
Like Anakin, Ahsoka is a great example of a Jedi who was deeply kind. Her levels of compassion were through the roof, but all of these adjectives describe her well except for insecure. She questioned her circumstances at times, but the girl was so dang secure in her convictions that she walked away from her only home and its "security" because she knew it was the right thing to do.
^ Are you talking about when she had to leave her mother to be a Jedi after Plo Koon came? Or are you talking about when she left the Jedi Order after seeing Barriss’s motives in bombing the temple?
If the former, then of course. She isn’t that clingy unlike her master Anakin. If the latter, then I’m not sure because she was insecure about the Jedi not believing in her and wondered how she could believe in herself. All this time she also tried to hide that she knew about Anakin’s secret relationship but couldn’t hide it any longer when they parted ways.
My pick: Bada*s
@Ditb01 I am talking about Ahsoka's choice to leave her home in the Jedi Order.
Like most Jedi of the time, she was too young (~1.5yo) to have considered her birth family her true home. To my canon knowledge, and not having seen unreleased episodes of Tales of the Empire, Ahsoka left because she couldn't extend trust to the Jedi Council which had overall voted against her, and thereby sentenced her to the death Tarkin recommended.
Making her own (young) adult choice to leave an established organization that admitted its wrongdoing and welcomed her back does not read at all as insecure to me. Other than Anakin, Obi-Wan, Plo Koon, and probably Yoda, the Jedi legitimately didn't believe in her despite all the wonders she did during the war. It was an incredibly bold choice to live as her own person with her own rules in a galaxy that might be just as unfair, yet she chose to take that chance, and she may not have survived the Great Purge if not for it.
Edit: Alluding to Anakin's relationship with Padmé was a symbol of respect and empathy. She'd known for ages and rooted for them both, understanding how much Anakin had wanted to leave himself, and possibly even hoping that the two of them would find her after the war and perhaps live openly and freely with her as a true family.
I say she is compassionate because she shows that in her character with others
@SpicetimeContinuum I think that's a fair argument. Ahsoka didn't need to impress them anymore because she knows most if not all of the members of the Jedi Order are corrupt. This is, in fact an awesome example of maturity and character development for this young woman.
What about where she fears about Anakin so much which starts in Order 66 when she sensed it and builds up all the way until when she really confronts him in Rebels and again in the Ahsoka series? She does feel really anxious about it.
All of the above
Please pick one!!
What do you think?