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Amirah LeNochri: Difference between revisions

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==Requesting one non-Jew to tell another==
==Requesting one non-Jew to tell another==


#Instructing one non-Jew to tell another non-Jew to do a forbidden activity on [[Shabbat]] is a major dispute and many hold that one should use this leniency unless there’s a mitzvah need, a financial loss, or if it’s done before or after [[Shabbat]].<ref>39 Melachos (Rabbi Ribiat; vol 1, pg 72). Sh"t Chavot Yair 46 says if you tell one non-Jew to tell another one, that is permitted even for torah violations and certainly for violations that are only midirabanan.</ref>
#Instructing one non-Jew to tell another non-Jew to do a forbidden activity on [[Shabbat]] is a major dispute and many hold that one shouldn't use this leniency unless there’s a mitzvah need, a financial loss, or if it’s done before or after [[Shabbat]].<ref>39 Melachos (Rabbi Ribiat; vol 1, pg 72). Sh"t Chavot Yair 46 says if you tell one non-Jew to tell another one, that is permitted even for torah violations and certainly for violations that are only midirabanan.</ref>
#Some say that it is permitted to ask a non-Jew to ask another non-Jew to do melacha on Shabbat, while others argue.<ref>Chatom Sofer OC 60 relies upon the Chavot Yair only in a case where one asked the non-Jew before Shabbat. Biur Halacha (307:2 s.v. afilu) argues that we shouldn't accept the Chavot Yair nor the Chatom Sofer. </ref>
#Some say that it is permitted to ask a non-Jew to ask another non-Jew to do melacha on Shabbat, while others argue.<ref>Chatom Sofer OC 60 relies upon the Chavot Yair only in a case where one asked the non-Jew before Shabbat. Biur Halacha (307:2 s.v. afilu) argues that we shouldn't accept the Chavot Yair nor the Chatom Sofer. </ref>


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