this post was submitted on 07 Oct 2024
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One seems like an exception rather than a rule. Also, my two interpretations exist because this new timeline where the Order doesnt fall is filled with unknowns. So I dont know what it would look like. The Jedi were already lost to the dark side by the time Anakin met Padme as a slave. It is why they couldn't see Palpatine even though he was right under their noses. A lot would have to change to avert the fall. As a Sith Lord was not their only problem, the Jedi's own attitudes had become corrupted and they saw themselves as infallible.
My point is that Ashoka, no longer being a Jedi, was no longer bound by the order's rules. As such, she was free to start a family is she so desired. That said, she could have done so even after order 66. That she apparently didn't do so suggests that she had no such desire.
Master Leem wasn't the only exception to the prohibition against marriage. Jedi Master Ki-Adi-Mundi was also granted an exception due to the low Cerean birthrate. He was allowed by the other Jedi to follow the Cerean custom of polygamous marriage—he had four honor wives and seven daughters.
Actually, I would argue starting a family after Order 66 would be highly irresponsible and dangerous considering the state of the Galaxy at the time. Jedi were being hunted down and killed and their children being taken to be trained as Inquisitors as shown in Darth Vader #19 from 2017. In this issue of the 2017 Marvel Comics run, Darth Vader and two Imperial Inquisitors interrupt the birth of former Jedi Master Eeth Koth’s first child. Vader kills Koth and steals his baby from its mother as they are fleeing. The baby was either taken back to be trained as an Inquisitor or killed. With this knowledge in mind, it’s easier to assume that starting a family would just be too risky for Ahsoka rather than not desired. Regardless, I see where you are coming from and I respect your opinion.
Darth Vader #19