{"id":21925,"date":"2021-08-18T14:43:37","date_gmt":"2021-08-18T14:43:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/?p=21925"},"modified":"2021-10-12T14:01:14","modified_gmt":"2021-10-12T14:01:14","slug":"whats-the-truth-about-naming-the-first-son-from-yibbum","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/religion\/jewish-law\/whats-the-truth-about-naming-the-first-son-from-yibbum\/","title":{"rendered":"What\u2019s the Truth about. . .Naming the First Son from Yibbum?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_2560,h_1780,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679408119\/Jewishaction\/AdobeStock_111390596\/AdobeStock_111390596.jpeg?_i=AA\"><img width=\"1024\" height=\"712\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-large wp-post-21925 wp-image-21926\" src=\"data:image\/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyB4bWxucz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMjAwMC9zdmciIHdpZHRoPSIxMDI0IiBoZWlnaHQ9IjcxMiI+PHJlY3Qgd2lkdGg9IjEwMCUiIGhlaWdodD0iMTAwJSI+PGFuaW1hdGUgYXR0cmlidXRlTmFtZT0iZmlsbCIgdmFsdWVzPSJyZ2JhKDE1MywxNTMsMTUzLDAuNSk7cmdiYSgxNTMsMTUzLDE1MywwLjEpO3JnYmEoMTUzLDE1MywxNTMsMC41KSIgZHVyPSIycyIgcmVwZWF0Q291bnQ9ImluZGVmaW5pdGUiIC8+PC9yZWN0Pjwvc3ZnPg==\" alt=\"\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/AdobeStock_111390596\/AdobeStock_111390596.jpeg\" data-format=\"jpeg\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1679408119\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" data-size=\"1024 712\" data-delivery=\"upload\" onload=\";window.CLDBind?CLDBind(this):null;\" data-cloudinary=\"lazy\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>Misconception:<\/strong> The first son of a levirate<sup>1<\/sup> marriage (<em>yibbum<\/em>) must be named after the deceased husband\/brother.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Fact: <\/strong>There is no such requirement, although whether it is allowed, discouraged or encouraged is subject to debate. This misconception may have arisen due to a comment made by Rashi in Bereishit.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Background:<\/strong> <em>Yibbum<\/em> is the Biblical commandment that if a married man dies childless, his brother should marry the widow, and their first-born son will, according to the <em>pasuk<\/em>, \u201c<em>yakum al shem achiv hamet<\/em>\u2014succeed in the name of his dead brother\u201d (Devarim 25:6). The literal translation of this Hebrew phrase is often understood as: \u201c[he] will perpetuate the name of the dead brother.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The objective of this mitzvah is stated explicitly at the end of the <em>pasuk<\/em>: \u201c<em>v\u2019lo yimacheh shemo mi\u2019Yisrael<\/em>\u2014his [the deceased brother\u2019s] name will not be erased from Israel\u201d (ibid.). This might lead one to interpret the earlier part of the <em>pasuk<\/em> as instructing that the son should be named for the deceased. This is such an obvious understanding that the Gemara (<em>Yevamot<\/em> 24a) quotes a <em>Baraita<\/em><sup>2<\/sup> that queries: if the deceased was named Yosef, should the son be named Yosef, and if the deceased was named Yochanan, should the son be called Yochanan? The <em>Baraita<\/em> rejects this possibility by invoking a <em>gezeirah shavah<\/em> (an interpretive methodology in which a known rule is applied to a new case based upon a similar word or phrase in both cases) from Bereishit 48:6. When Yaakov used the phrase \u201c<em>al shem achei\u2019hem yi\u2019kar\u2019u<\/em>\u2014they will be called after the name of their brothers\u201d regarding any future sons born to Yosef, the term <em>shem<\/em> (name) referred to inheritance; thus in the context of <em>yibbum<\/em>, the term <em>shem<\/em> in Devarim 25:6 indicates that the one performing <em>yibbum<\/em><sup>3<\/sup> receives his brother\u2019s inheritance, not that the son is named after the deceased.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>gemara<\/em> continues with Rava commenting that while in general the simple reading of a Biblical text (<em>peshat<\/em>) is never ignored, this instance is the sole exception. Although the <em>peshat<\/em> is that the son is named after his deceased uncle,<sup>4<\/sup> the <em>gezeirah shavah<\/em> entirely removes the verse from its plain meaning.<sup>5 <\/sup>Rashi and Ramban to Devarim 25:6 explain the phrase as the Gemara does, as does Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (d. 1888; Devarim 25:6), who does so at great length.<\/p>\n<p>Even absent a requirement to name after the deceased, Rashi (Rut 3:9, 4:10) poignantly explains how the transfer of the inheritance serves to perpetuate the memory of the deceased. He says that every time the widow or the <em>yavam<\/em> (brother who performed <em>yibbum<\/em>) enters the deceased\u2019s field or engages in commerce with his possessions, people will be reminded of the deceased and will mention his name in connection with the estate.<\/p>\n<p>In the pseudo-<em>yibbum<\/em> in which Boaz married Rut, the widow of Machlon, their son was not named after the deceased. Rut 4:10 says \u201c<em>l\u2019hakim shem hamet<\/em>\u2014to uphold the name of the deceased,\u201d a phrase reminiscent of that in Devarim 25:6, and concludes with \u201cthat the name of the dead be not cut off from amongst his brothers,\u201d again similar to <em>yibbum<\/em> of Devarim. The verse in Rut, unlike in Devarim, includes \u201c<em>al nachalato<\/em>\u2014upon his inheritance\u201d between those phrases, similar to how Chazal understand the law regarding <em>yibbum<\/em>. The son was then named Oved (Rut 4:17), not Machlon.<sup>6<\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In explaining a different Biblical example of <em>yibbum<\/em>, Rashi can be seen as contradicting the universally agreed-upon halachah that there is no obligation to name the child after the deceased brother. In Bereishit 38:8, Yehudah\u2019s son Er dies childless, and Yehudah instructs his next son, Onan, to do <em>yibbum<\/em> with Er\u2019s widow, Tamar (\u201c<em>v\u2019yabeim otah<\/em>\u201d) and bear a child, and thereby, \u201c<em>v\u2019hakem zera l\u2019achicha<\/em>\u2014you shall establish offspring for your brother.\u201d Rashi explains this to mean that the son will be called by the name of the deceased. Some commentators, such as Gur Aryeh and Siftei Chachamim (quoting <em>Nachalat Yaakov<\/em>), see no problem with this comment of Rashi and understand Rashi to be saying that the child would be considered as if Er had fathered him.<sup>7<\/sup> Others, such as the Ramban and Rabbi Eliyahu Mizrachi (the fifteenth-century commentator on Rashi, known as Re\u2019em), think that Rashi was actually saying that the son would be named after Er. Regarding that claim, Ramban states: \u201cThis is not true.\u201d The Re\u2019em, quoted approvingly by <em>Divrei David<\/em> (Taz), defends Rashi and says that Rashi did not err. Rather, pre-<em>Matan Torah<\/em> <em>yibbum<\/em> differed from the Torah\u2019s rules in two ways: the child was named after the deceased,<sup>8<\/sup> and <em>yibbum<\/em> could be done by other relatives and not only the brother.<sup>9<\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The Shulchan Aruch rules like the Gemara that the <em>yavam<\/em> gains his deceased brother\u2019s inheritance (<em>EH<\/em> 163:1) and that there is no need to name the son after the deceased (<em>EH<\/em> 166:5). \u201cNo need\u201d might imply that it is permissible, although possibly not encouraged. The Sefer HaTashbetz (Rabbi Shimon ben Zemah Duran, d. 1444; 4:25), in an approving postscript to a responsa about whether to compel <em>yibbum<\/em> in a particular case, says that the couple eventually did <em>yibbum<\/em> (and lived happily ever after) and their first child was a son whom they named after the deceased. Similarly, Rabbi Rachamim Nissim Yitzchak Palagi (d. 1907), commenting on the Shulchan Aruch (<em>Yafeh Lalev<\/em>, 6:<em>EH<\/em>:166, p. 86a) and basing himself on the Zohar, says the <em>pasuk<\/em> should also be taken literally and the first son should be named after the first husband, \u201cand that is what is done.\u201d Rabbi David Zechut (d. 1865; <em>Zecher David<\/em>, <em>ma\u2019amar aleph<\/em>, ch. 84 [p. 602-5 (modern edition) = 233b-4b (1837 edition)] also says that one may name the child after the deceased, but he suggests that they should also add another name so that it is not exactly the same name, and he testifies that he arranged such a naming for his granddaughter\u2019s son. Rabbi Mordechai Forhand (d. 1945; <em>Shu\u201dt Be\u2019er Mordechai,<\/em> <em>EH<\/em> 41:8 [p. 412]) infers from Rashi that the Gemara was merely saying that one is not obligated to name the child after the deceased, but if they want to, they may. On the other hand, Rabbi Yitzchak Schmelkes (d. 1906; <em>Shu\u201dt Beit Yitzchak,<\/em> <em>YD<\/em> 2:163:3) says that the reason Chazal did not suggest also fulfilling the <em>peshat<\/em> of the verse and naming the child after his mother\u2019s deceased first husband was because he died childless and thus has a \u201cbad <em>mazal<\/em>\u201d; it is therefore not only \u201cnot required\u201d to name after him, but not propitious and thus inadvisable. Rav Ovadia Yosef (<em>Yabia Omer<\/em> 5:<em>YD<\/em>:21) suggests that sources like the Zohar that insist on not naming after the deceased may be a reaction to the Tzedukim, who erroneously always followed the literal meaning of the text.<\/p>\n<p>The simple reading of the <em>pasuk<\/em> in Devarim seems to treat <em>yibbum<\/em> as a means of preserving the name and memory of the deceased. The halachah, as understood from the Gemara, introduced the idea of inheritance, lending <em>yibbum<\/em> a financial aspect. A third approach to <em>yibbum<\/em> adds a mystical, kabbalistic element. The Ramban (Bereishit 38:8), after criticizing Rashi\u2019s understanding of the <em>pasuk<\/em>, reveals that <em>yibbum<\/em> contains a great \u201csecret\u201d [kabbalistic aspect] of the Torah. Referring to <em>gilgul<\/em>, transmigration of souls,<sup>10<\/sup> Ramban says that this aspect of <em>yibbum<\/em> was already known before the giving of the Torah<sup>11<\/sup> and is efficacious even with other relatives, and that is why Yehudah and others practiced <em>yibbum<\/em>. Proponents of this approach, including Abarbanel (Devarim 25:5), who expounds on this idea at length, explain that <em>yibbum<\/em> is a method for the soul of the departed to return to this world in the child born from the union of the widow and the brother of the deceased (Rabbeinu Bachya, Devarim 25:6, 9). Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz (author of Lecha Dodi, d. 1576; commentary to Rut, <em>Shoresh Yishai<\/em> 79b [Jerusalem, 1979]) explains the mechanism of how <em>yibbum<\/em> accomplishes this goal. In this view, the phrase \u201c<em>yakum al shem achiv hamet<\/em>\u201d refers to the actual return of the brother\u2019s soul. Maharam Schiff (to <em>Gittin<\/em> 43b) quotes from the Zohar that the soul of the departed returns in the son, and uses this to explain a particular halachah.<\/p>\n<p>If the widow and the brother of the deceased choose not to marry, they instead perform the <em>chalitzah<\/em> ceremony which involves several oral declarations, the widow removing a special shoe from the brother\u2019s foot,<sup>12<\/sup> and spitting on the floor. Until either <em>yibbum<\/em> or <em>chalitzah<\/em> is performed, the widow may not marry. <em>Chalitzah<\/em> thus seems to be purely utilitarian as a means of permitting the widow to remarry, and indeed that is how many authorities understand it. The Chatam Sofer (<em>Shu\u201dt<\/em> 2:85; cited in <em>Pitchei Teshuvah,<\/em> <em>EH<\/em> 165:7), while conceding that there is no independent mitzvah to do <em>chalitzah<\/em>, suggests that it is a form of <em>chesed<\/em> to the deceased, similar to the recitation of Kaddish. And while the widow is not obligated to do this <em>chesed<\/em>, he says that when he had such a case and explained it that way to the widow, she acquiesced to do it. Others, such as the Rashash (<em>Sanhedrin<\/em> 19b) and Netziv (<em>Ha\u2019amek She\u2019eilah<\/em>, Ki Tetzei, 154), think it is an independent mitzvah, which, as a by-product, also frees the widow to marry.<sup>13<\/sup> According to the <em>gilgul<\/em> approach to <em>yibbum<\/em>, doing <em>chalitzah<\/em> instead of <em>yibbum<\/em> delays the return to earth of the soul of the deceased, and Rabbeinu Bachya (Devarim 25:9) thus sees in the removal of the shoes in the <em>chalitzah<\/em> ceremony an echo of the mourning ritual.<\/p>\n<p>It is clear that Biblically, <em>yibbum<\/em> is preferred over <em>chalitzah<\/em>, but already in the Talmudic period there is a debate (<em>Yevamot<\/em> 39b) about which course of action is the preferred one, and in Ashkenaz the custom developed to do <em>chalitzah<\/em> rather than <em>yibbum<\/em>. The Rema (<em>EH<\/em> 163:2, 165:4) records that some communities even legislated a financial incentive for the brother to perform <em>chalitzah<\/em>. Nonetheless, if need be, <em>yibbum<\/em> is done by Ashkenazim. Rabbi Hershel Schachter relates (<em>Nefesh Harav<\/em>, 1994, p. 265) that it once happened that a <em>yavam<\/em> was not able to do <em>chalitzah<\/em> because of an amputated leg and Rav Joseph Ber Soloveitchik instructed him to perform <em>yibbum<\/em> on the condition that they then divorce, and that is what they did. Among Sephardic communities, <em>yibbum<\/em> was more common, and this became a point of serious tension within the Chief Rabbinate in the early years of the State of Israel. In 1950, the Chief Rabbinate passed the \u201cJerusalem Ban\u201d outlawing <em>yibbum<\/em> in Israel (<em>Shu\u201dt Heichal Yitzchak<\/em> 1:<em>EH<\/em>:5, p. 51). The following year, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, as chief rabbi of Tel Aviv, challenged the ban, asserting that for Sephardim it should remain an option (<em>Yabia Omer<\/em> 6:<em>EH<\/em>:14; 8:<em>EH<\/em>:26).<sup>14<\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The mitzvah of <em>yibbum<\/em> usually arises following a tragedy, the death of a childless married man. The Torah hereby provides a method to ensure that the widow is provided for and protected, and a means to perpetuate the memory, if not the name, of the deceased.<sup>15<\/sup> The Tur (<em>Perush HaTur Ha\u2019Aruch, <\/em>Devarim 25:6) suggests that the <em>pasuk<\/em> is not just a commandment, but also a promise from God that there will indeed be a continuation to the name of the deceased and that, despite the tragedy, there is a promise of a future. n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Notes<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. The English name for <em>yibbum<\/em>, levirate marriage, is derived from the Latin word <em>levir<\/em> which means \u201chusband\u2019s brother.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>2. Cf. <em>Sifrei<\/em> to Devarim 25:6. The Malbim offers several reasons why the Midrash\u2019s conclusion is actually the only logical one.<\/p>\n<p>3. Tosafot (<em>Yevamot<\/em> 24a, s.v. <em>oh<\/em>) assert that a literal reading of the text indicates it is the <em>yavam<\/em> (brother who performed <em>yibbum<\/em>), and not the son, who inherits. Prisha (<em>EH<\/em> 166:9) and Aruch Hashulchan (<em>EH<\/em> 163:1) explain how the entire verse is read based on the Gemara\u2019s <em>derashah<\/em> and they similarly assert that the verse refers to the brother as inheriting. Rashbam and Ramban (<em>Hasagot<\/em> to <em>Sefer Hamitzvot<\/em>, <em>shoresh<\/em> 2; cf. <em>Shadal<\/em>) understand the literal reading of the <em>pasuk<\/em> as referring to the son inheriting.<\/p>\n<p>4. The Septuagint omits the word \u201c<em>achiv<\/em>\u2014his brother\u201d from the translation of the verse. Furthermore, in the Brenton English translation of the Septuagint it says that the child is named after the deceased. However, that is not clear in the original Greek.<\/p>\n<p>Ibn Ezra (Devarim 25:6) says, \u201c<em>yikarei b\u2019shem achiv<\/em>\u2014[the child] will be called in the name of his brother,\u201d but he is likely not contradicting the Gemara. Rather, he was saying that the child will be attributed to the deceased (i.e. \u201cLook, there\u2019s the <em>yibbum<\/em> child of this deceased man.\u201d) This is based on Ibn Ezra\u2019s own comment to Bereishit 38:9 regarding Onan\u2019s awareness that the child \u201c<em>lo yikarei b\u2019shmo<\/em>\u2014would not be called in his [Onan\u2019s] name\u201d; meaning, the child would not be \u201cknown as his [Onan\u2019s] son,\u201d rather as the son of the deceased father.<\/p>\n<p>5. Once the <em>gezeirah shavah<\/em> overrides the simple reading, the mention of \u201cfirstborn\u201d at the beginning of the verse is taken to refer to the oldest brother as the one who should preferably do <em>yibbum<\/em> (<em>Yevamot<\/em> 24a).<\/p>\n<p>Ramban (<em>Hasagot<\/em> to <em>Sefer Hamitzvot<\/em>, <em>shoresh<\/em> 2) asserts that in general when Chazal give <em>derashot<\/em> they still hew to a certain extent to the <em>peshat;<\/em> thus in this case, which Rava views as unique, it must be that the halachah is a total disconnect from <em>peshat<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>6. In an interesting comment, Rabbi Yosef Caspi (early fourteenth century; <em>Kapot Kesef<\/em> in <em>Asarah Klei Kesef<\/em>, p. 10 on Rut 4:17) notes that according to the verse, the name Oved was given by the neighbors, and thus he suggests that Boaz and Rut actually named the son Machlon \u201cas commanded in the Torah.\u201d He concedes that Ibn Ezra disagrees because in the subsequent genealogy (Rut 4:18-22), the name Oved is the name used for Boaz\u2019s son.<\/p>\n<p>Earlier in the story (Rut 1:11), Naomi references a pseudo-<em>yibbum<\/em>, as pointed out by the <em>Midrash Rabbah<\/em> and by Rashi, when she tells her widowed daughters-in-law that she has no more future sons to offer them.<\/p>\n<p>7. That is similar to how Seforno (Devarim 25:6) understands the <em>pasuk<\/em> about the mitzvah of <em>yibbum<\/em>. He says that the child is attributed to the deceased in the heavenly ledger and it is as if the dead brother fulfilled the commandment to procreate.<\/p>\n<p>8. Note that Yehudah (the father) later did \u201c<em>yibbum<\/em>\u201d with Tamar, but the resulting twins were not named after Er or Onan. It is intriguing that in the two Biblical pseudo-<em>yibbum<\/em> stories\u2014Yehudah and Tamar and Boaz and Rut\u2014both involve a prior refusal (Onan and Ploni Almoni), and that the Davidic line goes through the offspring of both of those unions as mentioned in King David\u2019s genealogy (Rut 4:18-22).<\/p>\n<p>9. The Bechor Shor (Bereishit 38:13) justifies Tamar\u2019s actions vis-\u00e0-vis Yehudah by noting that pre-<em>Matan Torah, yibbum<\/em> was done by any relative, even the father of the deceased, and the Torah then limited it to paternal brothers. Nonetheless, he points out that it continued to be done by additional relatives who are allowed to marry the widow, as Boaz did with Rut.<\/p>\n<p>There are those who want to derive from Boaz\u2019s action that \u201cbrothers\u201d in the <em>yibbum<\/em> command in Devarim 25 is not literal and means close relatives (as it does in other places in the Torah), but Ibn Ezra (Devarim 25:5) forcefully rejects that interpretation and maintains that both <em>peshat<\/em> and tradition agree that Biblical <em>yibbum<\/em> is only with a paternal brother.<\/p>\n<p>10. See Rabbi Yitzchak Blau, \u201cBody and Soul: <em>Tehiyyat ha-Metim<\/em> and <em>Gilgulim<\/em> in Medieval and Modern Philosophy,\u201d <em>The Torah U-Madda Journal<\/em> 10 (2001): 1-19, in particular pp. 8-9.<\/p>\n<p>11. It is interesting to note that forms of <em>yibbum<\/em> exist in many cultures, modern and ancient, including some ancient Near-Eastern societies. For example, the twelfth-century bce tablets excavated at Ashur containing the Middle Assyrian Laws mention variants of <em>yibbum<\/em> in sections 30, 33 and 43, and the Hittite Laws from around sixteenth-century-bce Turkey mention it in section 193 (see chapter 14 in Marten Stol, <em>Women in the Ancient Near East <\/em>[Germany, 2016], 296-299). Interestingly, while <em>yibbum<\/em>-type customs are widespread, I have not come across any parallels to <em>chalitzah<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>12. Note that the shoe removal in Rut 4:7-8 was not related to <em>chalitzah<\/em> (despite Boaz\u2019s later pseudo-<em>yibbum<\/em> with Rut) but rather, as explained in the Yerushalmi (<em>Kiddushin<\/em> 1:5) and Rashi, this was how acquisitions were performed in those times, and thus it was a transaction and not <em>chalitzah<\/em>. Rashi says it is similar to our <em>kinyan<\/em> <em>chalipin\/sudar<\/em> (a \u201cbarter-type\u201d halachic mechanism of transferring ownership). See <em>Bava Metziah<\/em> 47a, where this <em>pasuk<\/em> is used to derive the rules of <em>kinyan chalipin<\/em>. The fact that the Targum translates \u201c<em>na\u2019al<\/em>\u201d in Rut 4:7-8 as \u201c<em>nartek yad<\/em>\u2014a glove\u201d further makes it clear that this was a transaction and not <em>chalitzah<\/em>. The Revid Hazahav (Rabbi Dov Ber ben Yehuda Leib Tribish, Shemot 3:5) notes that in three places in the Torah there are instructions to remove a <em>na\u2019al<\/em> from feet. If <em>na\u2019al<\/em> meant only shoe, \u201cfrom feet\u201d would be superfluous. Hence, he says, the Targum is correct that <em>na\u2019al<\/em> can be on the hand or foot, referring to either a glove or a shoe.<\/p>\n<p>13. For a summary of the various opinions regarding if it is a mitzvah or a <em>matir<\/em>, see <em>Encyclopedia Talmudit<\/em>, vol. 15, pp. 617-618.<\/p>\n<p>14. For a full discussion of this fascinating halachic and historical\/sociological topic, see: E. Westreich, \u201cLevirate Marriage in the State of Israel: Ethnic Encounter and the Challenge of a Jewish State,\u201d <em>Israel Law Review<\/em> 37 (2003): 427-500.<\/p>\n<p>15. A famous case of <em>yibbum<\/em> is that of Rav Yose ben Chalafta, a student of Rabbi Akiva. He married the widow of his brother, and together they had five children, all luminaries of Torah: Yishmael, Eleazar, Menachem, Chalafta and Eudemus (<em>Yerushalmi<\/em>, <em>Yevamot<\/em> 1:1; see <em>Shabbat<\/em> 118b).<\/p>\n<p><em>Rabbi Dr. Ari Z. Zivotofsky is a professor of neuroscience at Bar-Ilan University in Israel.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Misconception: The first son of a levirate1 marriage (yibbum) must be named after the deceased husband\/brother. Fact: There is no such requirement, although whether it is allowed, discouraged or encouraged is subject to debate. This misconception may have arisen due to a comment made by Rashi in Bereishit.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":15,"featured_media":21926,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ep_exclude_from_search":false,"_cloudinary_featured_overwrite":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[65],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-21925","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-jewish-law","issues-fall-20215782"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>What\u2019s the Truth about. . .Naming the First Son from Yibbum? - Jewish Action<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Misconception: The first son of a levirate1 marriage (yibbum) must be named after the deceased husband\/brother. 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