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Kira is kidnapped by a cult that worships the Pah-wraiths and is led by their "Master" - Dukat.

Summary

Vedek Fala, one of Kira's teachers from during the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor, arrives on Deep Space 9 and she greets him warmly. However, there is more to the kind old man than meets the eye; he uses a homing transponder to transport her to the abandoned outpost Empok Nor.

There she finds a Cult of the Pah-wraiths who have chosen Dukat as their leader. He attempts to convince Kira to believe in the Pah-wraiths, telling her that they speak to him, and "opened his heart". She blatantly refuses to believe him, but he keeps her on the station anyway, still convinced she can be changed.

She also has another spiritual argument with Fala, who shows her the community they have built to show her she has nothing to fear. She sees Mika, the first to get permission to have a baby with her husband, Benyan. Fala explains that it is part of their covenant with Dukat to take vows of abstinence. Kira is skeptical.

At a prayer meeting, as everyone has their eyes closed and chants, Kira grabs a weapon during a prayer, and threatens Dukat. Several cult members stand in the way, and one knocks her unconscious soon after. Dukat takes care of her, much to her surprise when she wakes up. After another argument with Dukat, she is determined to prove Dukat a fraud. She cannot believe his followers are willing and that he is as changed as he sounds.

Mika soon goes into labor, but when her child is born, it is half-Cardassian. Dukat explains that the Pah-wraiths have sent them a sign. Mika, however is obviously much more skeptical, despite the apparent willingness of the others to believe. Her husband is also having trouble believing it.

Kira immediately confronts Fala with this turn of events. Fala defends Dukat's words, arguing that a miracle is something she cannot rule it out. When Kira pushes him hard enough, he admits to suspect her version of the truth, but doesn't want her interfering. Her further conversations with the father make it clear that he does not believe Dukat's story.

Dukat apologizes to Mika. When he gets her forgiveness and learns of her husband's disbelief, he flushes her out the nearest airlock. Kira, looking for Mika to ask her about the "miracle", saves her just in time. Dukat claims it was an accident, and everyone believes him -- except Benyan. When Kira loudly objects, Dukat sends her to her quarters.

At a sudden prayer meeting, Dukat then makes a great announcement: the pah-wraiths have asked everyone to shed their corporeal existences. Everyone, including him, will commit suicide.

Dukat visits Kira and informs her that he has contacted Deep Space Nine; they will send a ship within a day. Kira does not believe he will die with them. He reassures her that all of their deaths will be painless, thanks to Promazine, a pill used by the Obsidian Order to commit suicide in event of capture and the bodies become dust in hours and so he does not fear it. He will be with the pah-wraiths, and that is his salvation.

As the ceremony begins, Kira manages to escape from her cell. She rushes into the hall, and knocks down Dukat as he holds his tablet, knocking over a pedestal containing dozens. He starts searching in vain for his particular tablet as she is restrained.

When one of his followers hands Dukat another tablet, he cannot accept it. When Kira calls him on his duplicity, and the crowd becomes restless, Dukat protests that he alone must live to show others the light of the pah-wraith. None believe him, and, order falls apart; Benyan even claims it was Dukat's child. As he loses control, Dukat shouts to them that the covenant is broken, transports out.

Fala, despite all this, ingests his tablet. When Kira demands why, his only answer is "faith."

Kira is convinced Dukat does believe in the pah-wraiths, despite his continued despotic patterns. She also notes the possibility that Dukat really did receive the suicide order from the pah-wraiths. Either way, he is far more dangerous now than ever...

Memorable quotes

"Faith has to come first."
"That's too bad. I have a feeling it must be very comforting to believe in something more powerful than yourself."

- Kira and Odo


"I've always found that when people try to convince others of their beliefs it's because they're really just trying to convince themselves."

- Kira


"Your hair, you changed it."
"Your ear, you pierced it."

- Dukat and Kira

Background information

  • This episode came about because the writers felt that since the six-episode arc and "Waltz" they had allowed the character of Dukat to slip too much into the background. As René Echevarria explains, "He's a wonderful character and well-liked by the audience, but he'd become a very peripheral villain after the six-episode arc at the beginning of Season 6. We'd done two shows with him after that ("Waltz" and "Tears of the Prophets"), but now he had no role to play." "Covenant" was created primarily so that Dukat could reclaim the role of Deep Space Nine's primary villain. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • As well as simply 'reintroducing' Dukat as a villain, the writers also saw this episode as playing an extremely important role in setting up the conflict between Dukat and Sisko which would act as the dénouement of the entire series. As Echevarria says, ""Covenant" brought him back into our story. Somehow it seemed like it was going to help us put him in conflict with Sisko. But we didn't really know much more than that: Pah-wraith versus Prophet, Dukat versus Sisko." Similarly, Ira Steven Behr states, "I always knew that the ultimate challenge would be Dukat, and not the War." Bradley Thompson concurs with this view; "It gave us a chance to ask ourselves, 'What is Dukat's madness and how is it manifesting itself now?' We could touch base with him and show that he's really getting hooked into these Pah-wraiths. And that would help us set up the end of the series." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • In this sense then, "Covenant" acts as a sequel of sorts to "Tears of the Prophets" insofar as it demonstrates that Dukat's relationship with the Pah-wraiths is alive and well, and is not something that he is dabbling in merely for his own good; he has come to genuinely believe in the power of the Pah-wraiths, and this belief is what would form his primary raison d'être in the ten-episode arc which closes the series. Indeed, in relation to just how devout Dukat has become, Echevarria explains, "I came up with the idea of having him pray alone. He's not performing for anybody. In his own twisted, self-aggrandizing way, he genuinely would prefer to send these people to their makers with their faith intact than to allow it all to fall apart." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) Dukat has become a true believer, something which would have great repercussions in future episodes.
  • The basic story of this episode came from David Weddle, who had been an investigative reporter and had written about cults for the L.A. Weekly and San Jose Mercury News. According to Weddle, "I've always been fascinated with cults. I'm interested in that hunger to find something to believe in that's bigger than the viewable reality. The desire to find heaven on earth often ends up leading people down a very twisted, paranoid road. Fundamental human longing can be twisted by a cult leader, because he can never deliver on his promises of bringing about a golden utopia. Then he has to come up with reason why, and it's always that there's a conspiracy out there, that something or someone is conspiring against the group. That's when paranoia gradually overshadows the whole thing. Vedek Fala is a good example of a typical follower. He's someone who desperately wants to believe. When you study cults, you find a lot of people who were brought up in traditional religions and who had a strong faith when they were young. But they became disillusioned with that faith when they saw hypocrisy. They cast aside the faith they were brought up with, but they still have the need. The hunger is still there. At the end, when Dukat turns out to be a total charlatan, Fala can't handle it. He would rather die still trying to grip the illusion than go on living." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • Specifically, the episode was inspired by the Heaven's Gate cult led by Marshall Applewhite. The cult was inspired by the Comet Hale-Bopp, and in March of 1997, Applewhite and thirty-eight other members (including the brother of Nichelle Nichols) committed suicide, believing they were aliens and that their bodies would be transported to a space ship traveling behind the comet. The group has an official website, which is still accessible today. [1]
  • In the original script, Dukat was the leader of a group of aliens. However, this was changed because the Cult of the Pah-wraiths had already been established when the Bajoran wormhole was closed in "Tears of the Prophets", and again in "Image in the Sand", when a member of the cult attempted to murder Sisko. As well as that, the writers felt the message of the episode would be more poignant to both Kira and the audience if Dukat's followers were Bajoran. Additionally, given Dukat's prior dealings with the Pah-wraiths and his love-hate relationship with the Bajoran people, this made sense.
  • Initially, the producers wanted the baby to be fairly visible during Dukat's proclamation of a miracle, but the problem was that there are very strict rules as to how much prosthetic makeup can be used on an infant, and how long an infant can be on-set. As such, the producers decided to go with an animatronic baby, and they hired the people who made the Chucky doll for the 1988 Tom Holland film Child's Play. However, according to B.C. Cameron, "It looked like Chucky with a Bajoran nose. His eyes were blinking and he was really spooky looking." Ira Behr says that the first shoot of the scene where Dukat holds the baby up for the gathered crowd produced the biggest laugh ever seen in dailies; "This animatronic baby was moving its head, and Marc was holding it up for the camera, playing the scene for all it's worth, even though it looked ludicrous. It looked as if he were proclaiming to the world, 'Take a look! This is a phony baby! You can get one at Toys "R" Us! Thirty-five dollars and ninety-five cents!' We were howling with laughter and crying in frustration at the same time. The day will live in infamy." Needless to say, the scene was reshot sans animatronic baby. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
File:Master Dukat's halo.png

The illuminated "Master"

Video and DVD releases

Links and references

Starring

Also starring

Guest stars

Uncredited co-stars

Stunt doubles

References

Bajor; Bajoran Ancient Texts; Bajoran earring; Bajoran cargo shuttle; Bajoran transport; Cardassians; Celestial Temple; Cult of the Pah-wraiths; Dax, Jadzia; Defiant, USS; Dominion; Emissary; Empok Nor; fusion generator; god; homing transponder; hydroponics; Kira Meru; Klingon religion; Master; Obsidian Order; Occupation of Bajor; Orb; Pah-wraith; promazine; Prophets; Porta; ranjen; replicator; Romulan ale; springwine; Sto-vo-kor; Telna; tachyon energy; Til'amin froth; tea; transporter; University of Bajor; vedek.

External links

Previous episode:
"The Siege of AR-558"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Season 7
Next episode:
"It's Only a Paper Moon"
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