DS9 Stories/News: Bajoran Life Part (4)

Bajorans are a humanoid race from the planet Bajor. Bajorans are a very spiritual people, and their history has produced many great architects, artists, builders and philosophers.

Bajoran civilization has existed for over a half-million years. A contemplative and spiritual people, the early Bajorans saw little need in reaching to the stars. It is known, however, that the Bajoran people held limited interstellar abilities via primitive solar sail space craft.

Site: http://www.ussgalaxy.net/database/species/members/bajoran.htm

Bajoran culture declined greatly during the Cardassian Occupation, from 2328 to 2369 (was formally annexed in 2339), during which time the Cardassian Union dominated the Bajoran people. 10 million Bajorans were killed, but despite the brutality of the government implemented massacres, freedom fighters in the mountains of Bajor never ceased their struggle for independence. The Cardassians made heavy use of forced labor camps and attempted to strip the Bajorans of their cultural identity. Cardassian strip mining of Bajor lead to planet-wide ecological devastation. It was the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor that forced the Bajoran people to throw off their strict caste based culture and actively fight against their oppressors. They have only recently been allowed to rebuild their culture.

The Bajoran people successfully repelled the Cardassians from their world in 2369 and a provisional government was established. The United Federation of Planets was called upon to provide assistance during this time of chaos and turbulence. The Federation assumed control of the abandoned Cardassian mining station Terok Nor (which the Federation renamed Deep Space Nine) and acted as a deterrent to future Cardassian reprisals against the Bajoran people.

The discovery of the Bajoran wormhole (which the Bajorans called the “Celestial Temple”) made Bajor a site of scientific importance. Later, Bajor became a strategically important location when the Dominion began their invasion of the Alpha Quadrant.

Bajorans developed an intolerance of Cardassians due to the recent Cardassian occupation of Bajor. The Bajoran sense of spirituality is so strong that they have developed a very strong will due to their faith. Most Bajorans have studied their religion fairly extensively. Also, most Bajorans with a highly-developed faith are also devoted to the rebuilding of their world.

Bajor

The entire planet, or at least its largest continent, is known by geographic areas such as the Northwestern District, Northeastern District, etc. Those in turn, are divided into provinces such as Tozhat, Dahkur and Hedrickspool, each having its own administrative centre and council of Vedeks but both as subservient to the Capitol. The planet is larger than Terra and so its gravity is about 1.4g. A classical model of a Class M system, the planet has a number of large oceans breaking up the land mass, the water is said by many to be unusually green, probably due to a high concentration of microscopic plant life. The weather on Bajor is tropical over most of the planet, with periods of storms during certain seasons of the year. There are a number of desert areas, although most of the barren wasteland left by Cardassian mining has been reclaimed.

A massive system of aqueducts over the land mass provides both irrigation and an established transit system. Transport centres in major urban settlements often combine water and air transport, to the amusement of many off-world visitors.

The Capitol City is the center of Government, Military and Religion on Bajor. Most of the other settlements have now been fully rebuilt after the destruction of the Cardassian Withdrawal. There are few other large cities as Bajorans prefer small communities to large Urban sprawl.

DS9 Stories/News: Magic in Deep Space Nine: The Bajoran Prophets of Yesod…

Source: http://bajorron.blogspot.com/2012/01/magic-in-star-trek-deep-space-nine.html

Inside the Bajoran Wormhole: abode of the Prophets

Inside the Bajoran Wormhole: abode of the Prophets

It is an interesting endeavour to rewatch my all time favorite Star Trek series Deep Space Nine with my spiritual training in the back of my mind. Science fiction, like all good storytelling, does rely on the imagination, which is also one of the cornerstones of magical practice. But in Star Trek, magical concepts and ideas are often dealt with in new and surprising ways. And as Deep Space Nine may be the most spiritual of all Star Trek series, interesting correlations are bound to be found.
Take for instance the pilot episode “Emissary”. One of the key features of that episode is an encounter of Commander Benjamin Sisko with “wormhole aliens”, who the Bajoran people know as their “Prophets”. These creatures are presented as “non-corporeal” and do not live in our own “space-time continuum”, but in another higher form of being. They possess no fixed shape but communicate with Sisko while borrowing faces from people from his present and past, and continuously shifting countenances as well as the surroundings. All this happens in Sisko’s mind, because we, the audience, see what’s really going on: he is stuck in what looks like a white limbo, a “sea of milk”. And on an even lower level we know that his “runabout” is somehow stuck inside the Bajoran wormhole.
Sisko's encounter with the Prophets

Sisko’s encounter with the Prophets

What are these “Prophets” in our own magical terms? The Bajorans consider them as gods, but do we agree with them? The way these aliens are portrayed offers a key: they show themselves in a wide variety of guises yet their true form is somehow not perceivable. This “shapeshifting” reminded me of the next higher plane relative to our own, which is known in Kabbala as the Sphere of Yesod. This is a Hebrew word meaning Foundation, but more importantly for this discourse, Yesod is also -and more commonly known as the World of Dreams.
Tree of Life diagram: Yesod is indicated by the purple sphere, our material world is the green sphere at the bottom

Tree of Life diagram: Yesod is indicated by the purple sphere,
our material world is the green sphere at the bottom

It is a “world”, where images abound and these images are often illusionary and fluid as the waters or the sea. As fluid as the faces of the Prophets Sisko is encountering! Mark also that these aliens in Bajoran religion are called “Prophets” and not “Gods”. A “prophet” is someone who speaks on behalf of (a) God and not a god him- or herself. So, one starts to wonder who are the real gods of the Bajorans and whether these can be found higher up in the Tree of Life.
A Prophet wearing the face of Sisko's deceased wife, Jennifer

A Prophet wearing the face of Sisko’s deceased wife, Jennifer

The concept of shapeshifting as shown by these Prophets is often considered a trademark of a “higher being” in Star Trek. Later in Deep Space Nine, a race of shapeshifting Founders also proclaim themselves as Gods, also tapping into the power of the realm of Yesod. The same can be said about Q, the “omnipotent” nemesis of Captain Picard who resides in a realm called the Continuum which is equally fluid in its appearances. And many more examples may be given from all the various Star Trek shows. It seems that the makers of Star Trek did not want to deviate too much from the familiar states of being when portraying the nature of “advanced” beings. The World of Dreams, called “Yesod” in Kabbalah is quite close to our own experience (we all know dreams!), so that’s where we see most of these entities operate. It will be interesting to test these ideas in future episodes dealing with the Prophets and assorted beings!
I also spoke about the power of Imagination, and in Season One of Deep Space Nine there are at least two episodes that make an interesting use of this: The Storyteller and If Wishes Were Horses. More about that in a next blog!

DS9 Stories/News: Men I’ve Loved: Benjamin Sisko

Source: http://www.amaya-radjani.com/2011/09/men-ive-loved-benjamin-sisko.html

Command never looked so good

Command never looked so good

My friend Ankhesen, a devout Trekkie, introduced me to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine earlier this year.  Over the summer, I Netflix’d the entire series; seven years’ worth of episodes and had a mammoth sci-fi/fantasy marathon.  This marathon included the Twilight Zone, the Outer Limits, Thriller & Night Gallery, but more on those shows later.  Anyhoo, I’m a fan of TOS & TNG, but never gave DS9 any thought until Ankh showed me a few episodes.  And I fell madly in love with Captain Benjamin Sisko and bought the entire 7-season series for a great price at Cheqoot.com.

Before I express my admiration and lust love for the sexy Captain Sisko, I should provide you some context. Deep Space Nine is the best of the Trek shows I’ve seen, and Ankh assures me that it’s the best of the entire lot.  The writing is top notch, as is the acting, directing, editing and set designs.  There are also strong female characters; these women fight, command starships & freighters, govern planets, and act as spies.  One is a former terrorist and another is an intergalactic warlord. The show tackled issues of racism, sexism, faith, religion, slavery and corruption, as well as other hot-button topics.  It’s a very dark show; the series spends nearly five years on an epic war with the Federation and its allies battling a hardcore violent faction known as the Dominion (which is run by a badass changeling chick I call Gertrude).  You see the Federation get their asses kicked on a regular basis; Starfleet vessels are routinely destroyed and people murdered.  The series finale contains a grisly scene in which three men are standing amid a pile of rubble and dead bodies.  DS9 is not idealistic like TOS & TNG; you see real shit happening in this show and there are parallels as well as portents to our own society.
Sisko; seasons 1-3

Sisko; seasons 1-3

The only real drawback is the costume/wardrobe department, who should have had their asses kicked from here to Jupiter for the hot fire mess that was DS9’s apparel.  They had a real opportunity to do some really fantastic things with character attire, but failed miserably.  I can only assume that the producers chose to put the money into the writing & directing and left a bare minimum for wardrobe.  There is absolutely no reason for anyone in the 24th century to look this damn hideous:
Jake typically looked like a pack of crayons

Jake typically looked like a pack of crayons

I mean, for real.  But I should point out that it was usually the human outfits that were ugly.  They got things right with most of the other races (especially the Klingons).  There was also the ridiculousness of Starfleet officers clearly being off duty and still attired in those hot-ass uniforms. As if!  You see Captain Sisko (who is also an architect and chef) cooking elaborate meals while still wearing his Starfleet uni.  *snorts* I call bullshit.
DS9 introduces us to a wonderful cast of characters that include Ferengi, Klingons, Trills,All this sexy, and he can cook too. Breen, Romulans, Bajorans, Cardassians, and changelings.   The star of the show, however, is a man named Benjamin Sisko, captain of the space station.  Captain Sisko is portrayed by the excellent actor Avery Brooks.  The show starts with Sisko as a grieving husband and loving father who is duty-bound to take over a raggedy Bajoran space station.  He has a wonderful relationship with his son Jake; there are plenty of hugs, kisses and adventures between them.  It’s rare to see a black man in such a positive role, and I relished every second of it.
Sisko is an honorable, ethical guy who is devoted to his son, dedicated to his career as a Starfleet officer, and is the voice of the Prophets, the Bajoran gods.  He has a commanding presence and is highly respected by everyone he encounters, especially his enemies.  I liked him a lot in Seasons 1-3, but fell in love with him at the start of Season 4.  This is when the war between the Federation & the Dominion heated up and the show’s writers kicked the storytelling into high gear.  It is also when Avery Brooks, who spent the first three seasons with hair on his head and not on his face, decided to go bald and goateed; a look I find intensely attractive.  It gave his character a powerful edge; an extra marvelous oomph! that made me pay close attention every time Sisko was on the screen. Which, for the most part, was nearly all the time.
Sisko; seasons 4-7.

Sisko; seasons 4-7.

But the captain isn’t perfect; he sacrifices much for peace, including his own happiness and self-respect.  He violates orders, lies, cheats, bribes others, and is an accessory to murder, among other things.  He even becomes a Klingon to accomplish a mission (but this is NOT a bad thing; Klingons are fucking awesome).  But this made Sisko more appealing to me because he’s flawed just like any other person.  It gave him a depth that I haven’t seen in any other Starfleet captain and made DS9 that much better.
Sisko also has some of the best lines in the show.  Here are a few of my favorites:
So, I lied. I cheated. I bribed men to cover the crimes of other men. I am an accessory to murder. But the most damning thing of all…I think I can live with it. And if I had to do it all over again, I would. Garak was right about one thing: A guilty conscience is a small price to pay for the safety of the Alpha Quadrant. So I will learn to live with it.”  –In the Pale Moonlight, Season 6
Brag all you want, but don’t get between me and the bloodwine!”  –Apocalypse Rising, Season 3  (He’s a Klingon in this episode)   
"Haven't you seen a Klingon before?"

“Haven’t you seen a Klingon before?”

Kasidy Yates, where are you going?  –For the Cause, Season 4  (Kasidy is Sisko’s boo)
It’s not every day that you meet the girl you’re going to marry.” –Emissary, Season 1
You betrayed your uniform!”  –For the Uniform, Season 5
He played me all right. And what is my excuse? Is he a Changeling? No! Is he a being with seven lifetimes of experience? No! Is he a wormhole alien? No! He’s just a man, like me – arrgh! And he beat me!” –For the Uniform, Season 5
"Go on!  Shoot me!"

“Go on! Shoot me!”

Do you know what the trouble is? The trouble is Earth. On Earth, there is no poverty, no crime, no war. You look out the window of Starfleet Headquarters and you see Paradise. Well, it’s easy to be a saint in Paradise.”  –The Maquis, part 2, Season 3
I could go on, but you get the idea.  Captain Benjamin Sisko is The Man.  More television shows should be bold enough to have characters like him, and write shows with as much depth and realism as Deep Space Nine.  It would certainly be a massive improvement to the dreck that inundates current TV.  Heaven knows I’d start watching it again.

DS9 Stories/News: Design Appreciation, The Costumes of Deep Space Nine (2)

Cont.

Ferengi

Nowhere is the breadth of pattern more evident than in the Ferengi costume. Used as the comic element of the show, every Ferengi was always dressed in formal suits of at least three layers with metal clasps, buckles and ornimentation. You might guess that the vest and shirt were abbreviated, but Quark was sometimes shown without his jacket and you could see that each piece was fully tailored. The Ferengi are such a great example of the excellence of the DS9 costume design that we’ve devoted a gallery of enlargeable images to their genus.

Black and white

Even without colour in costumes, pattern was used extensively, often with numerous designs within a monochrome outfit, sometimes so subtly, it’s hardly perceivable in the seconds they’re on screen. But colour itself was often used to convey clues about the alien or humanoid’s true nature. Many characters were costumed from head to toe in black, indicating their evil intent without speaking a word.

This ‘good guy – bad guy’ costuming tradition was cultivated to its natural culmination in Necessary Evil (Season 2, Episode 8) when a woman believed to be a widow in need of a favour starts off clothed entirely in white. Midway through the episode she wears a purple costume and by the end, when she’s revealed to be a deceptive extortionist, she’s wrapped (and arrested) in black.

A similar costuming tactic was used for characters of ambiguous moralities and confused principles or those who were tied to evil-doers, like the daughter of a Cardassian dictator or a father who had his son genetically altered illegally, out of love for his child.

Heads

Religion played a big part on the series and the clergy were given very brightly-coloured outfits, often with flowing robes and wraps and shaped headwear that denoted their rank.

Extremely ornate headpieces, often a part of elaborate wigs, were also often seen on the show.

DS9 Stories/News: Behind the Scenes on Deep Space Nine

BY  ON JULY 10, 2007 4:31 PM ON DEEP SPACE NINE

The Next Generation had proved the resilience and appeal of the Star Trek universe — it was not dependent on its famous first crew for its success. The future of Star Trek seemed unlimited. But after five years of production, Paramount executives could see that their own future was more constrained. It made little economic sense to continue most television series for more than five or six seasons. Costs invariably increased, storylines became exhausted and the syndication market would fill with too many episodes chasing too few time slots. From a purely business perspective, The Next Generation ‘s days were numbered. But everyone’s instincts said that Star Trek still had not saturated its market. In Paramount offices, the idea of a third Star Trek series was discussed.

The Next Generation had shown that Star Trek could thrive without its original characters. Could a new series survive without a ship? Rick Berman, who was Gene Roddenberry’s handpicked successor as the person to guide Star Trek after his death and Michael Piller, The Next Generation‘s most influential writer, created Star Trek: Deep Space Nine with exactly that challenge in mind.

Production designer Herman Zimmerman inspects the space station model

Production designer Herman Zimmerman inspects the space station model

For more than twenty-five years, one of Star Trek ‘s strengths had been the detailed future universe through which the two Enterprise s had traveled. Now the franchise’s newest guides decided it was time to venture out into that universe, choose a pocket of it and locate a new series there.

January 1992 marked the launch of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Sadly the announcement of the plans to produce the series came shortly upon the after of Gene Roddenberry in late 1991. The timing led to the speculation that had Roddenberry lived, Deep Space Nine might not have. Suspicions along these lines were raised particularly after description of the new series filtered out. “It’s going to be darker and grittier than The Next Generation,” executive producer Rick Berman had stated in the March 6, 1992 Entertainment Weekly. “These characters won’t be squeaky clean.”

Even though the announcement about Deep Space Nine seemed to come out of nowhere several weeks after Roddenberry’s death, Berman and Michael Piller had actually been discussing ideas for a new series for some time. It was always planned to be a spinoff from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Ideas were discussed with Paramount but it never went beyond the planning stages. When Brandon Tarticoff moved from being head of NBC to behind head of Paramount, he told Berman that he wanted to see another Star Trek series to launch into syndication. Berman and Piller returned to their series notes and worked up a proposal for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

Alternative costume design by Robert Blackman

Alternative costume design by Robert Blackman

In October 1991, Berman and Piller began developing the new series and they decided to set it in the same time frame as The Next Generation — a decision made consciously to take advantage of the Star Trek universe that had so far been established. Berman and Piller wrote several different versions of the series bible while it was being developed. When they finally showed a later version to Paramount, the studio provided its own input into the project and in fact Brandon Tarticoff, before he left Paramount, suggested that the show might be something like The Rifleman in outer space, although Berman and Piller did not quite feel that this idea particularly fit in with what they were trying to develop. But the studio’s suggestions were weighed and incorporated into the series concept to produce the final result.

Deep Space Nine was a means of escaping the somewhat limiting constraints of Gene Roddenberry’s original Star Trek concept. According to Rick Berman, they “set about creating a situation, an environment, and a group of characters that could have conflict without breaking Gene [Roddenberry]‘s rules. We took out characters and placed them in an unfamiliar environment, one that lacked the state-of-the-art comfort of the Enterprise and where there were people who didn’t want them there.”

These are characters who come through much darker than the Next Generation characters,” reflected Michael Piller, “but I don’t know that I could say this is a dark series.”

It’s still Gene Roddenberry’s vision. It has an optimistic view of mankind in the future. Reason and dialog and communication are still the key weapons in the fight to solve problems. I think the label of darker is probably exaggerated.

Alternative costume design by Robert Blackman

Alternative costume design by Robert Blackman

For writing the Deep Space Nine‘s pilot, Piller was influenced slightly by “Encounter at Farpoint”, which had been The Next Generation‘s first episode. Piller took his cue from “Encounter at Farpoint” in delaying the introduction of some key characters until later in the story. Another key plot ingredient reused was the necessity of having the lead character explain or justify humanity to an alien race. Piller managed to give the concept, so many times used on both the original Star Trek and The Next Generation, an interesting spin — Sisko had to communicate with aliens who did not understood humans and their ilk because they did not, themselves, experience time in linear fashion. Sisko would thus be faced with the difficult task of explaining time, human consciousness and the importance of humanity’s past experiences to an utterly uncomprehending alien form of consciousness.

Early Cardassian costume design by Robert Blackman

Early Cardassian costume design by Robert Blackman

Piller, however, was dissatisfied with his early versions of the script for “Emissary” and continually involved a somewhat reluctant Rick Berman in constant rehashing of their original story ideas. The basic plot with Sisko explaining humanity to the unseen aliens was too talky, according to Piller and the other aspect of the story, the transition to Federation command of the space station, seemed to be suffering.

In the early concepts of the series, the setting of Deep Space Nine was to have been a dilapidated, seedy space station with technology that lagged somewhat behind that of the Federation. In the course of series development, this notion had been scrapped in favor of a more high tech look. Now, however, Piller was forced to rethink this whole approach — while that station would still be a fairly advanced piece of alien technology, Piller decided that the departing Cardassians would ransack the place, leaving a shambled that Sisko would be faced with rebuilding. Now the new commander’s job would involve convincing the merchants of the Promenade, and other inahbitations of the station, to stay and pull things back together.

“Emissary” would end up costing as much as twelve million dollars to film — two million of which were spent on building the standing sets for the series.

When production began for Deep Space Nine, the Star Trek universe was already well defined. The Bajorans had been introduced in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Ensign Ro,” when Ro Laren became a popular character though not a regular cast member. “Ensign Ro” and later “The Wounded” told of the planet Bajor, a world conquered fifty years before by furthless aliens known as the Cardassians. The Nazi like Cardassians stripped the planet of natural resources using Bajorans as slave laborers. After forty years of Bajoran terrorism and the mining out of the planet, the Cardassians left Bajor which immediately sought Federation membership, offering Starfleet to take control of the former Cardassian space station.

The first episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine explored Bajoran culture and religion. Bajor’s religious leader, the Kai, appears in crucial scenes in “Emissary.” Not long after, in “Battle Lines,” her character is written out of the series, leaving Bajor in religious turmoil. The series explores Bajoran culture in “The Storyteller,” “Cardassians” and “Sanctuary,” continuing in season two with “Homecoming,” “The Siege,” “The Circle” and “The Collaborator.” Piller and Berman set Deep Space Nine in the midst of Bajor and its conflict with the Cardassians. Piller, who had headed the script department of The Next Generation, said, “One of the primary goals in making this series is to do something we didn’t have the opportunity to do in The Next Generation.”

Early Cardassian costume design by Robert Blackman

Early Cardassian costume design by Robert Blackman

The experienced creative team and established storyline failed to give a strong start to Deep Space Nine. Berman and Piller wanted to break new ground. That began with Commander Benjamin Sisko. “We wanted to create a new kind of Star Trek hero,” said Michael Piller, “a man who is not just the Starfleet officer who has given up family for career, like Picard; not like Kirk, who’s one of the boys on a great adventure. He is a man who had had a family and has lost a wife he loved and must raise a son.

Avery Brooks said his “very human” character avoided the military strictures adorning many Starfleet officers. He said of his character, “So much of the military veneer is not there. He expresses what he feels. He isn’t particularly interested in being here. He’s following orders. He’s worried about raising his son in this environment. This station has been devastated.”

Deep Space Nine was the ultimate distillation of the Star Trek universe. The crew was united under one flag. There was no ship and there was little physical exploration. More importantly, what remained of Star Trek was the firmly established background details of the twenty-fourth century, the ever more complex consistency of future history and technology and the determination of Berman and Piller and their production crew to create an arena for adventure and storytelling that would live up to the name, Star Trek.

Which they did. Deep Space Nine was an instant success, sharing many viewers with The Next Generation, adding new viewers of its own, demonstrating once and for all the deeply appealing richness of what Gene Roddenberry had wrought. It wasn’t the characters. It wasn’t the ship. Star Trek was a state of mind. And millions still wanted to share it.

From Garfield, Judith Reeves-Stevens, The Art of Star Trek (1995) and James Van Hise, Hal Schuster, The Unauthorized Trek: Deep Space Nine The Voyage Continues (1994).

The station played host to a wide variety of alien lifeforms, not all of them quite humanoid. Here a Dan Curry alien concept.

The station played host to a wide variety of alien lifeforms, not all of them quite humanoid. Here a Dan Curry alien concept.