Does a non-Jew who has a monetary debt claim on the house and enters without the homeowner's explicit permission count as having entered 'with permission' for eruv purposes?
Synopsis
Whether a creditor-non-Jew who enters to collect a debt is considered to have entered 'bireshut' (with permission) and thus potentially prohibits carrying. Authorities dispute this.
More in City Limits for Shabbat Walking
Does a non-Jew who enters a courtyard (chatzer) as a temporary lodger without permission (shelo bireshut) prohibit carrying there on Shabbat?
3 opinions
Does a non-Jewish lodger who entered with permission and is a habitual visitor prohibit carrying in the courtyard immediately?
3 opinions
Does a non-Jewish lodger who entered with permission but is not a habitual visitor prohibit carrying before thirty days have passed?
3 opinions
When soldiers of the king enter Jewish homes — whether by force or with the homeowner's consent — and the Jewish homeowner has muktzeh items stored in those rooms, do the soldiers prohibit carrying?
7 opinions
What is the minimum type of item the homeowner must have in the soldiers' room to retain tefisas yad and avoid the prohibition? Is a movable (non-muktzeh) item sufficient, or must it specifically be muktzeh?
3 opinions
Does the Biur Halacha's analysis change the ruling in Seif 1 for a non-Jewish lodger who was merely a guest (without any explicit loan or rental agreement)? Does such a guest ever prohibit?
2 opinions
Related from other topics
May a prayer leader who enters the synagogue during the congregation's silent prayer immediately lead the repetition without first praying silently?
Repetition of Amidah
Is ordinary business dealings with non-Jews (without partnership) permitted?
Respecting Sacred Texts
When a householder who avoids non-Jewish bread and a guest who does not share this practice eat together, which bread should be used for the householder's blessing?
What Counts as Bread
May a shamash who is serving two people join their meal to participate in a zimun (grace after meals quorum of three) without being explicitly invited?
Blessings on Bread-Like Foods
Is an attending servant permitted to eat with the diners he is serving without explicit invitation?
Table Conduct
Is zimun performed when eating in a non-Jew's house?
Zimmun of Ten
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
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