Study Chullin folio 94A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
Consequently, it should also be permitted to send to a non-Jew a thigh that has been cut, because Jews will not come to purchase it from him. Rather, if the Mishnah is referring to a place where all the butchers are Jewish, and they announce every time they sell a tereifa to a non-Jew, in which cas
The Talmud offers two answers: If you wish, say that the Mishnah is referring to a place where they announce every time they sell a tereifa; and if you wish, say that the Mishnah is referring to a place where they do not announce every time they sell a tereifa.
The Talmud explains: If you wish, say that the Mishnah is referring to a place where they announce every time they sell a tereifa, and nevertheless it is permitted to send a whole thigh of meat to a non-Jew. There is no concern that the non-Jew will sell the thigh to a Jew, because the Jew would kno
And if you wish, say that the Mishnah is referring to a place where they do not announce every time they sell a tereifa, and nevertheless it is prohibited to give the non-Jew a thigh that has been cut up. The rabbis issued a decree against doing so, lest he give it to the non-Jew in the presence of
And if you wish, say that there is an entirely different reason why one may not send a non-Jew a cut-up thigh without removing the sciatic nerve: Because he thereby deceives the non-Jew. The non-Jew will think that the Jew has exerted himself to cut up the leg and remove the sciatic nerve and that a