Star Trek: Tasha Yar's Romulan Daughter Is Even More Tragic Than Fans Thought

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Star Trek: Tasha Yar's Romulan Daughter Is Even More Tragic Than Fans Thought
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Sela's story is one of Trek's most heartbreaking.

SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT IDW's current Star Trek line of comics has capitalized on opportunities to look closer at characters from throughout franchise history, from beloved heroes to its greatest villains – with the latter category including Sela, Tasha Yar’s half-Romulan daughter.

Star Trek #11 – written by Jackson Lanzing and Collin Kelly, drawn by Angel Unzueta, colored by Marissa Louise and lettered by Clayton Cowles – features Sela, Doctor Crusher and the still-unnamed Orion medic forced to work together, leading Crusher and Sela to a confrontation over the memory of Natasha Yar.

Sela Refuses To Acknowledge Her Humanity Tasha Yar famously had one of the wildest, and most tragic, arcs in Star Trek history. The first security officer of the Enterprise-D, she was killed in Star Trek: The Next Generation’s first season. She would then return for a one-off appearance in the show’s third season, as part of an altered timeline. This Tasha Yar then traveled into her past, where she was captured by Romulans.

In Star Trek #11, Crusher praises her fallen comrade, saying she “could move mountains.” The half-Romulan retorts that her mother was a coward, who “fell on her back to save her own.” This is too much for Doctor Crusher, who slugs Sela across the face, reminding Sela that Tasha died trying to save her life – not the life of her Romulan commander father – in an attempt to smuggle Sela and herself out of a Romulan facility, in a further tragic ending to a tragic character.

Sela’s Star Trek: The Next Generation appearances showed her to be a true Romulan, loyal to the Empire. Tasha never had the chance to raise Sela with human values and morals. Sela’s Romulan conditioning runs deep, leaving few signs of humanity left in her, with the God-War exacerbating Sela’s worst tendencies. What makes Sela truly tragic, though, is how she views her mother. Tasha deeply loved Sela and only wanted what was best for her.

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