Diz Kaggle (Jedi Renaissance)

Diz Kaggle was a male Dazouri Jedi Knight who served the Jedi Order during the Jedi Renaissance era and the following Golden Age. Like all Dazouri, Kaggle had two forms: rest and rage. His career as a geologist was marked by many great finds and discoveries thanks to his shrewd intellect when it came to determining locations for buried artifacts.

Youth
Diz Kaggle entered the ranks of the Jedi Order at an early age, given over to Recruiters at the end of the Clone Wars. A Dazouri male, Diz Kaggle's biology allowed for him to transform from a diminutive purple biped into huge hulking brute with shaggy black fur, large claws and fangs, and horns on the forehead and cheek. While commonly referred to as the "rage form", Kaggle's Jedi handlers instructed him from an early age never to give into his anger and to hone it into strength in the Force. Never entering into the rage form during his years at the Grand Academy on Ossus, Kaggle was taken under the care of Clawdite Jedi Master Dens Bargu who sought to train the young Dazouri as his Padawan.

Taking Kaggle out into the wilderness of Ossus, Bargu instructed the young Padawan to focus his energies into transforming into his second form. As a Clawdite, Bargu knew the complexities of changing one's shape and was eager to assist Kaggle in this step into taking control of his own body; a necessity if one were to walk the Jedi Path. Spending months calling upon the Force to bring about the transformations, Kaggle was a wild thing at first but was able to calm himself and with time, the transformations became more fluid, and his actions controlled. In his larger form, Kaggle could hear the Force just as when in his shorter state, and could use it just as effectively. His body was stronger and he was physically more powerful, but his connection to the Force remained in balance.

when agitated, they could transform into significantly larger beings with long sharp claws. The species appeared reasonably primitive, cultivating farms by hand with hoes and other tools. They organized their crops in circular patterns around a central fruit bush.