The force is strong in Saudi Arabia ... and there's a history book that depicts this very fact.
Students in the kingdom recently discovered a photo in their social studies textbooks of the late King Faisal - in a lesson about the United Nations - with Yoda, the Jedi master from Star Wars, seated right next to him.
King Faisal ruled Saudi Arabia for 11 years and is credited with modernizing the kingdom during his time. He encouraged public education, established a judicial system and introduced television during his rule.
Naturally, it would only make sense to have a chapter dedicated to his achievements.
But, what was Yoda doing next to him as he signed the United Nations Charter in 1945?
The image was created by Saudi artist Abdullah Al Shehri, also known as Shaweesh, as part of a series in which he photo-shopped pop culture icons into historic photographs.
Little did he know this one photo would end up in a school textbook released by the Saudi Ministry of Education.
"I am the one who designed it, but I am not the one who put it in the book,” Al Shehri told The New York Times.
The 26-year-old artist got the idea after coming across a photo of the late Egyptian president Anwar Sadat meeting Mickey Mouse when skimming through photo archives from the Middle East.
He thought to himself, "this is what the archive needs ... something fun, something that makes it less depressing," he told The New York Times.
And that's what led to a photo-shopped image of Yoda next to King Faisal. Why Yoda?
"He was wise and was always strong in his speeches," Shehri explained.
"So I found that Yoda was the closest character to the king. And also Yoda and his lightsaber – it’s all green."
Then came its unexpected placement in a Saudi history book ... and of course, the jokes.
Remember? Worry not, "Saudi Ministry of Education" does!
"For world peace"
"I'm dying"
"Yoda is real guys"
Valid questions were raised
Star Wars' references were brought to the table
KUDOS to Shaweesh, seriously
Saudi education minister apologizes
Ahmed al-Eissa, the Saudi education minister, apologized via Twitter on Thursday for the "unintended mistake."
"The ministry regrets the unintentional error that appeared in textbooks of the photo depicting the signing of UN Charter 1945," Eissa tweeted.
"The ministry has begun printing a corrected copy of the curriculum and withdrawing the previous copy and formed a legal committee to determine the source of the error and to take the proper measures," he wrote.
The minister also clarified that he did not mean to offend the late king in any way.