<Snipped quote by Muttonhawk>
I see. Then how would a village react to a firbeling? Not that I can't work around this, but I'm curios as to how far this aversion goes.
They would probably try to cut it up and/or drive it away. Even without the Jvanic aversion influencing them, fibrelings are notorious for poaching and torturing hain to death for fun. However, Violet is probably smart enough to disguise herself as a piece of clothing to go by unnoticed.
Keep in mind, that's just for a fibreling. The Jvanic aversion is not necessarily a murderous one. Every hain has to face their aversion directly in adolescence during their second hatching, so they can tolerate a Jvanic presence to an extent. It just an amplified creepiness and nausea that they feel when seeing, hearing, touching, or otherwise sensing it. They prefer not to have it in their daily lives, but only a minority of tribes actively hunt down and destroy it where they can find it.
Take a sculptor, for instance. Hain will readily tolerate a sculptor living nearby as they are useful translators, traders, sages, and such. The sculptors will always be pariahs and will probably not be welcome to stay within their communities, but they won't be killed. The ostracism will have been especially reinforced after the blinding purge, as the realta specifically targeted Jvanic things as a priority.