e/Rodef

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has glosseng: A rodef (Hebrew רודף, lit. "pursuer"; pl. רודפים, rodefim), in traditional Jewish law, is one who is "pursuing" another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing. The source for this law is the Tractate Sanhedrin in the Babylonian Talmud, page 73a, which begins: And these are the ones whom one must save even with their lives [i.e., killing the wrongdoer]: one who pursues his fellow to kill him [rodef akhar khaveiro lehargo], and after a male or a bethrothed maiden [to rape them]; but one who pursues an animal, or desecrates the Sabbath, or commits idolatry are not saved with their lives. This law, the din rodef ("law of the pursuer"), is significant as one of the few provisions in Jewish law permitting extrajudicial killings.
lexicalizationeng: rodef
instance ofe/Mishpat Ivri
Meaning
Hebrew
has glossheb: בהלכה, רודף הוא אדם המאיים על חיי חברו, בכוונה ושלא בכוונה. המונח שאול מהמקרה הקלאסי, שבו אדם זומם לרצוח את רעהו ורודף אחריו. על פי ההלכה מותר להציל נרדף בנפשו של רודף. דיני רודף נדונו בתלמוד במסכת סנהדרין וברמב"ם בהלכות רוצח ושמירת הנפש (פרק א').
lexicalizationheb: רודף
Hungarian
has glosshun: A ródéf (héberül רוֹדֵף, újhéberben ródef, szó szerint "üldöző"), a tradícionális zsidó jogban olyan személyt jelent, aki valakit azért "üldöz", hogy meggyilkolja.
lexicalizationhun: Rodef
lexicalizationhun: ródéf

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Language: (ISO 639-3 code, e.g. "eng" for English)


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