Study Ketubot folio 28A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
And if he was a priest she may not live with him even in one alleyway that opens into several courtyards, even if she did not remarry, as she is forbidden to him forever. What is the ruling if it was a small village? May she live with her ex-husband in the same village? The Talmud relates that this
The Talmud asks: In cases where they may not reside in the same courtyard or alleyway, who is ousted in favor of whom? Which of them must leave? The Talmud suggests: Come and hear proof as it is taught in a baraita: She is ousted in favor of him, and leaves, and he is not ousted in favor of her. B
A dilemma was raised before the rabbis: If it was a courtyard belonging to both of them, what is the halakha; who is ousted in favor of whom? The Talmud suggests: Come and hear proof as it is taught in a baraita: She is ousted in favor of him. The Talmud elaborates: With what circumstances are we d
The Talmud asks: What halakhic conclusion was reached about this matter? The Talmud suggests: Come and hear proof from the verse: “YHWH will dislocate you the dislocation of a man” (Isaiah 22:17), and Rav said: This indicates that the dislocation of a man is more difficult for him than the dislocat
A baraita states: With regard to a priest who borrowed from his wife from usufruct property that she inherited from her father and then he divorced her, she is repaid only by means of another person and not directly from her husband, to prevent them from engaging in business dealings. Rav Sheshet s