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Great Purification

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A Halo ring is fired, wiping the galaxy of Flood and all sentient life.

"Activation is murder. A genocide larger than [this galaxy] has ever known. We are sworn to protect life, not destroy it! That is the Mantle we were given to carry."
— The IsoDidact, protesting the firing of the rings.[1]

The Great Purification[2] was the culminating act of the Forerunner-Flood war, when the seven rings of the Halo Array were fired. The rings' combined pulses scoured the entire Milky Way galaxy, disabling the Flood and wiping out all vertebrate life that was not safely outside its range at the Ark. The effects of the firing had lasting effects on the galaxy for the next 100 millennia, marking the end of the Forerunner ecumene and eventually leading to the rise of the Covenant.

Background

"The Flood cover more of our galaxy with each passing day. They feast on the essence of life itself. The only way to stop their advance is to remove that life upon which they feast."
— The Master Builder discussing the necessity of the Halo Array with the Librarian.[3]

After the Flood appeared defeated by early humanity, the Builders, led by Faber-of-Will-and-Might insisted that stronger measures needed to be put in place across the galaxy in case the Flood should ever return. They proposed the assembling of the Halo Array, enormous ringworlds that fire a wave with interstellar range that would purge the galaxy of Flood infection by killing all carbon and calcium-based lifeforms on which it fed. While this proposal was met with immediate outrage from the Didact and the Warrior-Servants, the Librarian and her Lifeworkers reneged to the plan if environmental steps were taken to preserve as much of the galaxy's wildlife and races as possible for reseeding after the Array was fired. These two suggestions were approved and the Halo Array was assembled, designed as both a weapon of mass destruction and nature preserve.

The Flood eventually returned to the galaxy, but as the war escalated and the parasite spread even further, the Didact (now two individuals) remained steadfastly opposed to firing the rings. Both of them viewed galactic genocide as a violation of the Mantle, the Forerunner code of doctrine. While the IsoDidact refused to fire on moral grounds, not wanting to kill billions of innocents, the Ur-Didact rejected the Halos on societal grounds, certain that the Great Purification would cause the end of Forerunner dominance over the galaxy. Both of them delayed activating the rings by attempting alternate plans to defeat the Flood, including the anti-Flood AI Mendicant Bias (who went rogue and defected to the Flood) and the creation of Promethean Knight droids, which were created from unwillingly transformed humans, thereby causing genocide to prevent genocide. Neither of these measures succeeded in defeating the parasite.

By 97,445 BCE, the Forerunners were badly losing, most of their population had been lost, and the Flood had reached almost complete control of the galaxy. With much reluctance, the IsoDidact fired the Array, initiating the Great Purification. The blast resulted in the death of the Flood and everything else and everyone else in the galaxy, including the Librarian herself.

The Great Purification was not the first time a Halo had been fired. A ring of the original array had been fired by the Master Builder at the Charum Hakkor system to test its effect on the native wildlife.[4] Later a pulse was fired on Janjur Qom to punish the San'Shyuum there who rebelled against the Forerunners.[5] At the Battle of the Capital Mendicant Bias took control of five of the nearby rings (which had been assembled for decommissioning) and fired them all.[6] The last use before the combined wave from the Array was at the Battle of the greater Ark, when Omega Halo was fired, damaging a Precursor star road and wiping out all life in the Large Magellanic Cloud.[7] Neither of the Halos were used again until 2552, when the Jiralhanae Tarturus attempted to fire Installation 05,[8] followed a month later by John-117 activating Installation 04B in order to cleanse the Ark of the Flood infestation there.[9]

Effects

"This installation has a successful utilization record of 1.2 trillion simulated and one actual. It is ready to fire on demand."
2401 Penitent Tangent[10]

The biological effects of the rings had long term effects on the galaxy's ecosystems. Because the Librarian could not rescue every species, all of the specimens left behind were wiped out and rendered their species extinct. Those species that had been saved on the Ark were reseeded afterward, but the gaps in the food chain were significant enough that during the dark time many more species went extinct due to their permanently altered environment. While the Conservation Measure did its best to eliminate any trace of genetic disruption, scars still remained in the fossil record. In 2332, scientists discovered a curious anomaly dated to Late Pleistocene, in which no fossils dating to roughly 97,000 BCE were discovered on colonized by humans. The Ross-Ziegler Blip, as it was called, was initially dismissed as a random aberration caused by spatial distortion, out of doubt that an interstellar extinction event could have occurred simultaneously on every planet. After the Halos were discovered by humanity, the Blip was reinvestigated, its cause now identified as the destruction of all bio-mass in the galaxy during the Great Purification.[11]

An unexpected effect of the Halos' firing was that Precursor artifacts were destroyed as well. This was due to the Halos interacting with neural physics, which held Precursor constructs together and made them nearly unbreakable. Firing a Halo in the vicinity of the artifacts would disrupt their atomic binds and thus disintegrate the relics. While initially viewed as an unfortunate side effect, as when a ring was tested at Charum Hakkor, this disruption turned into a small advantage for the Forerunners in their war against the Flood, letting them use the Halos to destroy Precursor star roads that were being controlled by the parasite. When the Great Purification occurred, every Precursor artifact in the Milky Way was destroyed, leaving no trace of them for modern civilizations. Shortly before the blast, the Gravemind revealed that the Domain, an immaterial dimension used by the Forerunners as a repository of knowledge, itself was a Precursor creation and so would be wiped out with the Flood. As such, when the rings fired the blast erased 100 billion years worth of stored knowledge and recorded history.[12]

Legacy

"Halo! Its divine wind will rush through the stars, propelling all who are worthy along the path to salvation."
— The Prophet of Mercy[13]

When the reseeded civilizations of the galaxy rebuilt in the following millennia, they were left with only distant historical fragments of the age of Forerunners. The San'Shyuum, initially rebellious against the Forerunners, turned to worshipping their long departed oppressors. Without the complete account of what had happened, the San'Shyuum came to believe that the Halos were great machines designed to ascend its users to godhood. Their interpretation of the fragmentary texts was that the rings summoned sublime energies that burnt away falsehood and freed the soul from the material world.[14] The Forerunners, according to them, had become spirit and reined as gods, and had left their relics and holy texts behind to inform the other races on how to ascend like them. This legend about the Halos came to form the basis of the Covenant religion, and the Covenant was formed as an interspecies union that together would seek the sacred rings.

There were some doubts among the Covenant that the legend was true. Some Sangheili, such as the clan of Ussa 'Xellus, believed that the rings did not exist but were a lie made up by the San'Shyuum in order to deceive species they enslaved.[15] One of San'Shyuum Prophets, Mken 'Scre'ah'ben, had doubts about the rings' function, since to him the descriptions of the Halo effect sounded close to that of weapons.[14] Another San'Shyuum, the future Prophet of Truth believed in the rings and initiated their firing, but feared that some of the faithful could be left behind and not ascend, after discovering that humans were, by his interpretation, un-ascended Forerunners. Truth thus resolved to eliminate all opportunity of doubt for the Covenant, demanding the extinction of humans before their status was discovered then ordering the Sangheili assassinated and replaced with Jiralhanae when many Elites began to question the claims of the Prophets.

References

  1. ^ Halo 3 - Terminal 2
  2. ^ Halo: Broken Circle, page 205
  3. ^ Halo 4 - Terminal 5
  4. ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 245
  5. ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 192
  6. ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 307
  7. ^ Halo: Silentium, page 273
  8. ^ Halo 2, campaign level The Great Journey
  9. ^ Halo 3, campaign level Halo
  10. ^ Halo 2, campaign level Gravemind
  11. ^ Halo: Evolutions - Essential Tales of the Halo Universe, "From the Office of Dr. William Arthur Iqbal", page 519
  12. '^ Halo: Silentium, pages 322-323
  13. ^ Halo 2, campaign level Sacred Icon
  14. ^ a b Halo: Broken Circle, page 67
  15. ^ Halo: Broken Circle, page 196