THE TRUE BRUJAH
By Damien Moore
At one time the Brujah were not all rebels. At one time they sought to understand, not to destroy.
Before Carthage. To many of the Brujah of the time, this was a dirge. Their dream destroyed, their plans unravelled. Many were claimed by Hunters, by the plots of the Jyhad, as they fell into despair, and so into carelessness.
Some, however, did not grieve. They were angered, seeking vengeance. These Brujah were the basis of the High Council of Clan Brujah. They met in secret in the ruins of Carthage, and formed their plans for revenge.
Each time they had given their dreams flesh, the other, jealous clans came and destroyed what they had built. Even with their wide powers over the elements, their powers of Presence and their Potence-enhanced strength, they did not have warriors to fight the other clans.
A plan was conceived to give them these warriors. From this point onwards, the High Council would conduct a 'breeding' program for Brujah warriors. Those who Sired were to find those with the fighting spirit, who were high of temper, who could defend their Elders. They were no longer to be taught their Sire's powers over the earth, but instead were to be taught to move with the speed of lightning.
The Council believed that the combination of Potence and Celerity would give their warriors the ability to defend them, to create a warrior-class within the Clan. Those who created Childer against the Council's edict were held to be in violation of the Third Tradition and were either destroyed along with their Childer or ostracised and no longer granted the clan's protection.
There was more to this policy however, that met the eye. For the most-part, it was Troile's Childer rather than Brujah's that had somehow learned the discipline of Celerity, and thus it was they more than their siblings that Sired Childer. As a result, over the following two centuries the number of True Brujah fell, and the number of Troile's Childer increased.
These Childer were taught nothing of their Sire's original abilities, but simply assumed that they too were masters of Celerity. They were also instructed to destroy any Kindred they saw using the Elementalism discipline, described to them as a form of Blood Magic.
The years passed, and the warrior-Brujah's childer became more populous. They either forgot or did not learn their Sire's heritage, and the High Council faded from sight, so as not to present a target to the other clans. The Ventrue, the Malkavians, the Toreador, all assumed that the elder Kindred of the Brujah had been destroyed or had fled, or melded with the earth, no longer a factor in Kindred politics.
The other clans of the kindred noticed this change in the younger Brujah, but did not pay it much heed, often to their dismay when these new Brujah went mad, destroying all in sight. Since the fall of Carthage, the Brujah had been always on the edge of Frenzy. Some theorised it was the rage of Troile, echoing down through his bloodline. The High Council considered it to be an unfortunate side-effect of their new Childer's possession of Celerity, one that may reap its own benefits when they used their Childer in battle in the centuries to come.
This situation continued for a thousand years. The High Council, from their various Havens and hiding places watched, and their warrior-childer ravaged the Kindred world, increasing in numbers and generation. The Council cared not for their Progeny's fascination with the Anarch movement, regarding the battles against the other Elders as good training.
Indeed, when the Sabbat was formed, they would have collected their Childer and fought against the Ventrue and other clans. Except for one thing.
The Inquisition. Their fascination with their own Childer, their tweaking of their destinies, led the inquisitive mortals to them, the evil ones who sat in the background like the puppet-masters. And why, came the argument in the mortal councils, destroy the puppets when you may destroy the puppeteers
By flame, by stake and by sunlight, the mortals found and destroyed the True Brujah, one by one. Their secrecy from the world of the Kindred, long their shield, became the sword used against them, as they could not even call for their warriors.
And so the majority of the High Council passed away, their plans flapping loose in the winds of history. Without their subtle control upon their behaviour, their childer raged unchecked... the Sabbat, the wars of the Jyhad, all would have been lessened with the intervention of the High Council.
Not all of the council was destroyed. A small number of those who knew the truth escaped the flame, and fled into hiding, seeing this as a repetition of the destruction of Carthage. They lost much of their will to live, and slipped into Torpor.
The years passed, and their grief lessened, even in Torpor. The remainder of the High Council awoke, and took stock of the world around them. Times had changed since the dark ages of the Inquisition. New Empires had arisen and fallen, new thoughts and philosophies to light.
First in priority was regaining their control over their breeding experiment. This was complicated by the existence of the Sabbat. No longer was there a single Clan Brujah, but now there were the Brujah antitribu. These childer had conceived a plan to free themselves from tyranny, and in this they mirrored the true beliefs of the High Council -- freedom and self expression.
Yet once again, a Brujah's dream was shattered by the other clans. The Tzimisce and Lasombra clans took control of the dreams of freedom and turned them to anarchy and chaos.
Even their warrior-childer had split into several factions. The Iconoclasts were the chaotic and devastating warriors that the breeding program was designed to bring about. The Idealists on the other hand were extremely suspect to the High Council. Many of them decreed them to be the "legacy of Veddartha", and their attitudes of controlling all of the Brujah were termed "Ventrue-syndrome."
It was the Individualists that surprised the High Council the most. Even after 2,000 years, the True Brujah spirit seemed to spring anew from their chaotic childer. Many individualists were secretly sponsored by the High Council, and the most promising were led subtley towards an 'apprenticeship' -- an apprenticeship that ended in them being taught the true history of the Brujah, and led into their full legacy.
Nickname
Appearance
These younger kindred often are a strange mix. Scholastic backgrounds are mixed in with very fit sportsmen. The members of this clan tend to dress casually but conservatively.
Haven
Background
Character Creation
Clan Disciplines: Elementalism (Also see the Way of Fire by Juliean Galak), Potence, Presence.
Clan Weakness
Organisation
These True Brujah often masquerade as Intellectualist Brujah, so as to allow themselves to move easily within the Kindred world.
Quote
Stereotypes
Ventrue, Malkavian, Toreador: They destroyed Carthage. We will have only the minimum interaction with these clans, and we will play our cards very close to our chests when dealing with them. If their Elders suspected the truth...
Tremere: This clan is fun. No other clan presents such an opportunity to play with their minds. Our elemental abilities confuse them, and their manipulations disgust us. Simply take care that none of them gain your blood.
Nosferatu: Watch them. If they learn the truth they may sell it to others. A pity, as they have learned much.
Gangrel: They have helped us in days gone past, and it is said that they helped some of us escape Carthage and then the Inquisition. Respect them.
Camarilla: A perfect opportunity to watch our opponents move. Forget not that this runs both ways.
Sabbat: A waste. Deluded Kindred, believing themselves free from their Sire's Sires. This group is one of the areas to be pruned.
Setite: Trust them not. They are our cousins, but they are lost to the darkness within themselves.
View Elementalism discipline.
View Way of Fire .