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Customs
Clan Ghost Bear has few
official ceremonies or customs, instead relying on a broader spectrum of
traditions that give the Clan its unique identity. Reinforced through education
and the military chain of command, these characteristics make a Ghost Bear what
he or she is
The Virtue of Strength
In battle and in other endeavors, the Ghost Bears favor
strength above all things: not only physical strength, but strength of purpose
and character. Our strength has allowed us to prosper in spite of our often
hidebound ways and chronic political naïveté. A major contributing factor in
our development along these lines has been the Clan's easy access to metals and
other resources since the Golden Century. With an abundance of raw materials,
the Ghost Bears have had the luxury of heavier than-average 'Mech units, and so
can apply force more directly than Clans such as the Wolves and Ice Hellions.
On an individual scale,
each warrior's strength is also considered of primary importance. Hand to hand
combat training is as intense for MechWarriors as for Elementals, and even our
aerospace pilots are deadly outside the cockpit. Each year, teams from every
Galaxy compete in a Clan decathlon in the tradition of the ancient Terran
athletic contest. The winners of this event receive the respect of their peers
and a seat at the head of the table for the feast that follows the competition.
The Clawing Ritual
Personifying
the Ghost Bears' reverence for strength is the Clawing. This dangerous rite of
passage is undertaken only by the bravest of Ghost Bear warriors, but those who
survive it are destined to rise to the Clan's highest echelons. Only the
highest-ranking un-Clawed warrior in each Cluster may participate in the annual
trip to Strana Mechty There, the Clan Loremaster leads the candidates in a
month-long period of reflection and purification, reliving Tseng and
Jorgensson's journey in their hearts before they attempt it with their bodies.
The candidates from each Galaxy are then grouped into hunting parties and
equipped with only basic equipment, including a pair of hunting dogs to aid in
tracking down their elusive quarry. Armed only with a simple metal spear, the
hunters embark on their journey. They go out to find a ghost bear, defeat it in
combat and return its carcass to base camp as proof of their deed.
Fewer than half the
hunting parties return, and fewer still return successful. There is no dishonor
in failure, for the punishing Antarctic of Strana Mechty is a test of stamina
few warriors outside our Clan could survive. Usually, at least one hunting party
returns with a ghost bear. It is carefully skinned amid great ceremony; the pelt
fashioned into cloaks for the victors. The Clans abhor waste, and so the flesh
of the honored creature is roasted over a bonfire and shared among all the
candidates in the hope that ingesting the ghost bear will impart some portion of
its essence to them.
Haste Makes Waste
The founders of Clan Ghost Bear taught their warriors that
"to tread without care is to court disaster." As evidenced by their
slow but steady advances in the liberation of the Pentagon, Tseng and Jorgensson
believed a methodical and thorough approach was preferable to a blitzkrieg. In a
similar vein, the Ghost Bears see partial commitment to a cause as worse than no
commitment at all. We undertake nothing lightly, just as our founders did not
join the Exodus without due consideration.
This general tendency has
evolved over time into an overriding Ghost Bear philosophy. Strategically and
tactically, the Bears move in measured steps. In the field of military
technology, we do not rush to adopt unproven weapons, whose introduction always
disrupts the rank and file. Instead, we test any new acquisition, often by
observing other Clans as they employ the technology in battle. Only after a
technology or tactic has proven its worth is it employed by the Ghost Bear Clan,
whose warriors then embrace it wholeheartedly.
The Great Work
Among his many virtues, Khan Kilbourne Jorgensson was an
exceptional sculptor and musician. Though some warriors scoff at artistic
expression, throughout history many great warriors were also artists. In the
courtyard outside his headquarters, Kilbourne worked on a massive life-sized
statue of the ghost bear he killed during his own Clawing. He began the
sculpture immediately upon his return from that rite, to create a monument to
the great beast he had felled. Whenever possible, he would venture into the
courtyard and work on the sculpture, refining this or that detail. One day his
aide asked if he was nearly finished with the statue. The Khan responded
cryptically, saying. "When I am finished, so will the statue be
finished." The Khan was killed in battle later that month. The statue now
stands guard over the Jorgensson Bloodname Chapel in the Svoboda Zemylya (Peace
Park) on Strana Mechty.
Kilbourne Jorgensson's
sculpture gave rise to the idea of creating a "Great Work" to
demonstrate dedication to a long-term goal or cause. This usually takes the form
of a single artistic piece: a sculpture, musical composition, painting and so
forth. The Work is begun after an individual comes of age (after the Trial of
Position for warriors), and is worked on throughout life -daily if possible,
little by little. Such creations are never truly "finished." Like
life, the Great Work is a never-ending journey. Often a Great Work is a joint
effort of trothkin, especially when the effort is an especially large Work such
as a monumental sculpture. This type of Great Work has even more value in some
ways, as it also emphasizes teamwork.
By tradition, every
warrior is expected to create a Great Work, which is performed or displayed as
appropriate at the warrior's funeral ceremony. The Work is included in the
warrior's codex after death, as a monument to the warrior's spirit. In the case
of Bloodnamed warriors, the Work is perpetually displayed in the Svoboda Zemylya
near the warrior's Bloodname Chapel.
Family Values
Hard work and dedication are cornerstones of Ghost Bear
daily life. These attitudes are typical of the Clans, but the Bears further
reinforce them with the concept of family. A word repugnant to all other Clans, family
has a unique meaning to this Clan, founded as it was by a married couple. In
their 38 years as the Clan's first Khans, Tseng and Jorgensson imparted to their
warriors a unique sense of camaraderie and fellowship. As the years passed,
those first warriors passed this sense of belonging to those under their
command. The intensity of the relationship faded as the Clan grew, but the
general sense of it remained. To this day, Ghost Bear warriors maintain tight
bonds with their trothkin and Starmates, and lifelong friendships are
widespread.
This gives the Ghost Bears
unrivaled esprit de corps, but can sometimes prove a weakness as well.
Bonds of true friendship are hard to break, and when warriors are in the field,
this kind of attachment can sometimes lead them to take unwise risks on behalf
of their trothkin. Though this often results in heroic feats of valor, just as
often it can lead to the loss of the objective. Transfers can also be a problem,
as joining a new unit means new bonds must be forged and old ones pushed aside.
New units or units created from the fragments of others are often weak at first.
For this reason, Ghost Bear soldiers are normally transferred between units in
Star or Binary-sized groups rather than individually.
Training
Ghost Bear training is harsh and emphasizes the physical.
All warriors, even aerospace pilots, undergo extensive personal combat training.
Unlike many Clans failure in the initial Trial of Position does not immediately
relegate an aspiring Ghost Bear warrior to the ranks of the lower castes.
Rather, the cadet is shifted to another warrior sub-caste, his or her placement
based on aptitude tests, in the hopes that the cadet may test out more
positively there. This system avoids wasting the cadet's early training. If a
warrior fails to earn a position in the sub-caste, he is then sent to the lower
castes, as it is also wasteful to continue training a poor candidate.
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