Guide to Birthright Book Series, Part 3 of 3:
Meet the Characters of the Birthright Book series:
Heroes and Villains
ALLEGORY HAS SYMBOLIC FIGURES AND ACTIONS.
- Many of them have names which are symbolic in the story.
- The theme is based on the Bible story from Genesis about twin brothers, Jacob and Esau.
- In the book, the twins are named Benjamin and Ruben.
- As the story unfolds, two contrasting cultures spring from the choices each brother makes.
Heroes
Joseph ben Amoz, Benjamin and Ruben’s father. Joseph’s name is also from the twelve tribes. Amoz is the same name as the father of the prophet Isaiah.
Rebekah Nobles, wife of Lorenzo, encourages Ben to protect the birthright. Her namesake is Rebekah of the Bible, who rescued the birthright blessing from her wayward son Esau.
Allison Russell. Her character’s brilliant red hair matches her great intelligence. Her blunt truthfulness is amusing. Imagine my delight when I found that Teutonic and Swedish variations for “Allison” denote “truth”, and “noble humor.” Totally fitting!
Dan MacRay. A journalist with rare integrity, he founded Reality Worldview News. Dan “fights the good fight” by shining rays of light on corruption and evil. He becomes Ben’s boss in the newspaper business.
Villains
Ramses. Gandikon pirate chief who engages in human trafficking. His namesake, Ramses, was the pharaoh of Egypt who opposed Moses, made slaves of the Hebrews, and killed all Hebrew babies in attempt to stop the prophesied deliverer from carrying out his mission.
Members of the Anti-Hate Committee
Feral Hamad. Feral means fierce or wild. Hamad is a variation of Haman, who in the Bible tried to wipe out the Jewish people. Feral is extremely racist, and he founded Parents Legal and Youth services, or PLAY, which is a franchise of abortion clinics. I’m sure you know what counterpart in real life PLAY represents. Feral Hamad reminds Benjamin of a vulture.
Arch Kingerman is an archetype politician. His name is derived from a group in Native American history called the “king-men”, who always sought to overthrow liberty.
Elidor Redmund is ambassador to the Kohor Empire in Book 1. In Book 2, she is secretary of education, in charge of “re-educating” the people of Yeshurun. Her surname means “red world.” She is in love with Arch Kingerman.
Fomentio Dagon is a community organizer. He always foments, or stirs up, people to hatred and mob action.
Other Followers of the Order of Khazar
Delia Matagorda works for Alger Rotcraft. Delia uses her seductive and deceptive powers to damage Ruben’s moral compass. She is like the Bible story of Samson and Delilah. She ends up being deceived herself.
Nils Marlow. Atheist professor at Amulon University. Believes in nihilism[1], junk science and his own delusions of grandeur.
Boris Volkrusher works for the Kohor empire, in charge of drug cartels and assassinations. He takes delight in crushing folks, literally and figuratively.
Tyro Vulcan, thug, works for Volkrusher.
Guide to Birthright Book Series, Part 1 of 3: Allegory Meaning
Guide to Birthright Book Series, Part 2 of 3: People and Places
[1] Nihilism—a: viewpoint that traditional values and beliefs are unfounded and that existence is senseless and useless b: a doctrine that denies any objective ground of truth and esp. of moral truths
