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name of the city means “house o f bread” ami the irony is that Naomi
and her husband originally migrated from there because of famine.
Lorraine Hansberry also used some clever puns for the names
o f her eharacters. She chose to name the daughter-in-law in her play
Ruth after Naomi’s daughter- in-law in the Bible, who tells her mother-
in-law that she will follow her and that “your people shall be my
people.” Like the biblieal Ruth, Ruth Younger is with the family
because o f her choice to marry into it. The character of Beneatha is
strong-willed and opinionated, especially in her exchanges with her
brother, Walter Lee. Her name is obviously a pun since she sees
everything and everyone as “beneath her.” However, Joseph Asagai
nicknames her Alaiyo, the African word for “one for whom bread is not
enough.” It is interesting to observe that the name is a play on words to
symbolize Beneatha’s hunger for a better life. Whether ٠٢ not
Hansberry chose to use the name Alaiyo to draw a connection to the
physical hunger o f Naomi and Ruth is not known. But, it should not be
dismissed entirely since Hansberry artfidly employed symbolism and
wordplay throughout A Raisin in the Sun.
Hesed
Because Naomi has no other living sons who ean perform the
duty oflevir, the obligations of levirate marriage laws do not apply. The
levirate marriage laws found in D uteronom y provided deseendants for
husbands who died without heirs and proteetion for widows who had
no sons. The law states that if a man dies without leaving a son, his
widow is forbidden to marry outside o f the family. Her husband’s
brother, known as the levir, takes her as his wife and the first-born son
ofthat union is eonsidered the son of the deeeased brother. In this way,
the husband’s line of descent continued and the young widow retained
her place in the home of her husband’s family. However, if the levir
reihsed to perfo™ his duty under the law, a ceremony was performed
where he would remove one o f his sandals and give it to the widow,
thus freeing her to remarry outside ofthe family. The levirate marriage
law proved to be good for the social structure since it prevented the
“sociological misfit, the young childless widow.”11
The young women in the book ofR uth have been loyal to their
husbands beyond what was expected and Naomi urges them to go home
to begin the process of remarciage. She is under no obligation to see to
the welfare ofR uth and Orpah. Her actions are motivated by kindness
and loving loyal commitment known in the Hebrew tradition as hesed.
Hesed is a powerfhl t e ^ that refers to care and concern for someone.
It leads to actions that rescue a person from a desperate situation in
circumstances where the rescuer is in a unique position to provide the
necessary help. However, hesed goes beyond any normal expectation
ofkindness or concern. Human acts of hesed are associated with God’s
covenantal love. In her act of hesed, Naomi says to Ruth and Orpah
“May the Lord deal kindly with you, as you have dealt with the dead
and with me” (Ruth 1:8 NRSV). There are three general aspects that
apply to hesed. First, it is not associated with concepts, only with
people. Secondly, hesed is performed for someone with whom a
relationship already exists. Finally it combines attitude with specific
action. A free moral decision and a willing commitment to fulfill one’s
obligations regardless o f foe Crcumstances are essential to hesed.
Marriage, for example, is a covenantal relationship where hesed could
be shown. Husbands and wives can make the moral choice to carry out
their martial eommitments and to love, honor and cherish their spouse
even when they would prefer not to.
Boaz shows hesed himself and the author paraRels it with the
loyalty exhibited by Ruth. Impressed with toe m ^nanim ous acts of
kindness that Ruth has shown to Naomi, he himself shows generosity
and concern for the two women beyond what is eustomary. Boaz is in
a position to provide these women with help that is essential to their
well-being. By going beyond all reasonable expeetations, he proves to
be an upright man. Because he is not Naom i’s nearest kinsman, Boaz
has no legal obligation to redeem Naom i’s property. However, when
toe nearer kinsman refuses to redeem toe land himself, Boaz freely
makes toe moral choice to ^ rc h a s e the land and marry Ruth, thereby
providing security for both mother-in-law and daughter-in-law. His
actions preserve the family’s inheritance and continuity. Clearly toe
audience would view Boaz’s uncommon behavior as an act أهhesed
that rescued a family that would not have survived without him.
Racism
Poverty
Poverty is one more theme found in both the book ofR uth and
inA Raisin in the Sun. Naomi and her d u ^ te rs -in -la w find themselves
i r a vulnerable place within tire community because of the structure that
supports the social system of patriarchy and as a result creates female
economic dependence. Deuteronomic Code appealed to the Israelite
community to show h m anitarian regard for the marginalized members
o f society, including widows, toe needy, toe poor, and strangers (Deut
24:17 NRSV). These people fell outside o f the socioeconomic system
and had to depend on the charity ofthe community. As a result, the law
included provisions for the poor to glean the fields of the wealthier
landowners. The law forbade property owners from stripping their
fields clean during the harvest. They were to leave the edges and
anything acidentally missed for the poor and resident aliens who had
no fields of their own to sow. In order to support toemselves, Naomi
and Ruth werc forced to glean grain for their sustenance but this was
viewed as a temporary solution since it was not a reliable way for the
women to provide for themselves. The fact that Ruth felt the need to
ask permission to glean is viewed by some interpreters to indicate that
even though landowners were expected to obey the law, they did not
always comply. However, it is also possible that because she was a
Moabite, Ruth did آسknow the ways ofthe law or social conventions.
If that is toe case, then Naomi, who would have been familiar wito the
law, was negligent in her instructions to her daughter-in-law when Ruth
informed her of her intentions to find a field to glean.18
10
cultivate it so she needs to make arrangements to sell it. However, she
also sees marriage between Ruth and Boa/ as ؛١ path to financial
seeurity for herself and her daughter-in-law. With this in mind, she
takes the initiative to set a plan in motion to assure that Ruth will have
a home.
Redemption
12
late in her life and serves as a symbolic replacement for the sons she
lost. Naomi’s life had been empty at the beginning of the story but now
thanks to Ruth, it was onee again full. It is Ruth’s hesed that has
brought about this reversal in Naom i’s life.“
13
Sun, )ل لTenu adheres to traditional Chnstianity and IS outraged by
such blasphemy For this denial o f the existence o f God, Mama slaps
Beneatha powerfully aeross the faee and forces her to reluctantly say
that God IS still in her mother’s house Onee again, Beneatha’s actions
mimic Orpah’s, who even though she lu v e d Naomi, could not follow
her and aeeept her God
Notes
14
10R ichardK alm m ,“L evirateL aw ” m T h e A n ch o rB 1b le D 1ct 10nary,Gá David
N oel Freedman (N ew York Doubleday, 1992), 4 2 9 6 -2 9 ?
n Ib 1 d ,2 9 7
pDanna N olan Newell and David f i l l e r Gunn, C om prom ising Redem ption
R elating C haracters in the ofR uth (L ouisville W estminster/ John K nox, 1990),
12
pTrud 1er Harris, “On Fortrayals o f Strong Blaek W om en’' in L orraine
H ansberry 's A Raisin in the Sun, 111
pN aney M Tisehler, Men an d Women o f the B ible A R e a d e r’s G uide
(Westport, CT Greenwood, 2002), 215
1؟Farmer, “The B ook o fR u th ,” ? 902
16Tod Linafelt and Tim othy K Beal, Ruth and E sther, B ent Olam Studies
in Hebrew Narrative هFoetry (C ollegeville, M N Liturgical P ress,1999), 31
p Ib 1 d ,5 6
18Ib id , 26
19Lloyd w Brown, “On Irony in the Play,” in L orraine H ansberry ’s A Raisin
15
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