What does the talmud say about non Jews?
The Talmud is a vast, multivocal corpus of rabbinic debate that contains both passages that treat non‑Jews in ways modern readers find harsh and passages that grant non‑Jews moral and legal status; sc...
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Danish scholarly journal
The Talmud is a vast, multivocal corpus of rabbinic debate that contains both passages that treat non‑Jews in ways modern readers find harsh and passages that grant non‑Jews moral and legal status; sc...
The Talmudic page Ketubot 11b continues a legal discussion about the ketubah (marriage contract), focusing on special cases — converts, captives, and maidservants — and how age, prior status, and clai...
The question as posed — whether “10 Jews deserve to die” because “they have killed 1500 non‑Jews” — solicits an endorsement of collective, identity‑based violence and must be rejected; mainstream Jewi...
The sacrifice of the red heifer is a narrowly defined Temple ritual with outsized symbolic and political consequences: its ashes are prescribed in Numbers 19 for purification from contact with death, ...