Giving Gifts to Non-Jews
From Halachipedia
Source
Exceptions
- If you may receive something in return from the non-Jew, it is permissible to give gifts.[6]
- If you are giving a gift in order to maintain a peaceful environment, it is permissible.[7] Therefore, one may[8]:
- Give charity to a non-Jew.
- Visit a non-Jew who is ill.
- Bury and eulogize non-Jew.
- Comfort a non-Jewish mourner.
- One may tip a taxi driver, even though you’ll never see him again.[9]
Links
- Rabbi Aryeh Lebowitz - Lo Sechaneim - Gifts and Compliments to Gentiles
- Rabbi Chaim Goldberg - Bein Yisroel L'Nochri Siman 28 page 390
Sources
- ↑ Avoda Zara 20b quoting Devarim 7:2. Shulchan Aruch Y.D. 151:11 C.M. 249:2
- ↑ Tosfos Avoda Zara 20a s.v. d'amar. Beis Yosef C.M. 249. Shach Y.D. 151:18. Sma C.M. 249:2 explains that a ger toshav is a person who accepts the sheva mitzvos bnei noach and we are therefore obligated to provide for him if he doesn't have and are allowed to give him gifts. However, one who doesn't abide by the sheva mitzvos can only be sold to
- ↑ Meiri Avoda Zara 20a and Sefer HaChinuch Mitzvah 426
- ↑ Torah Temimah in Devarim 7:2
- ↑ Yad Rama Bava Batra 6
- ↑ Taz Y.D. 151:8. Rosh Avoda Zara 1:19 explains that it is not a free gift, but an exchange, similar to a sale. Ran (Gittin 38b) uses this rationale to explain how Rav Shimon Ben Gamliel freed his slave in order to complete a minyan. Although this was a gift to the slave, it is permissible if the givers benefit.
- ↑ Shulchan Aruch C.M. 249:2
- ↑ Shulchan Aruch Y.D. 151:12
- ↑ The Debreciner Rav (Beer Moshe 3:117) explains that if you don’t he (and his friends) will no longer stop and pick up Jews.