The Jewish people have a distinctive identity that is unique. The preordained defining qualities that characterize Jewish identity, is that our existence is begrudged by the rest of the world, and we dwell in perpetual isolation and aloneness. To best understand Jewish identity, one needs to deeply recognize the experience of the convert. The Jewish people are a nation of converts, because we originate from Avraham and Sarah who were converts. Our final redemption will come about through Ruth who was also a convert. The Book of Ruth speaks to our identity, as well as to our ancestral memories of sequestration and loss. 

The story of Ruth is a narrative about a princess married into an alien culture. Through widowhood she becomes disenfranchised, a nomadic nobody. She is dispossessed of all her wealth and material belongings. She is dislodged from her home and dislocated from her familiar world. The forced migration of Ruth and Naomi is not merely a geographical one. It is also a flight to a new station in society, and to a new psychological and spiritual world.

She is left with a choice. Either to return to her roots and reclaim her identity and belonging as a Moabite princess, or wander in a foreign place, living in poverty off the abandoned gleanings from the harvest. She chooses to stay with her mother-in-law and embrace the life of a displaced person, bereft of status, identity, means, power or franchise. Her narrative is about the quintessential convert and the emblematic Jew.

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