The non-Jew was accompanied by Rav Eytan Feiner, rov of the White Shul, Congregation Knesseth Israel, and Rav Uri Orlian, rov of Cong. Sharei Tefilla.
The non-Jew was accompanied by Rav Eytan Feiner, rov of the White Shul, Congregation Knesseth Israel, and Rav Uri Orlian, rov of Cong. Sharei Tefilla.
A. That’s not Rav Eitan Feiner in the picture. B. Something’s fishy about this story
You didn’t see the first picture
Nothings fishy. The Rabbonim heard of this chumrah to make the sale more ‘real’.
It doesn’t say that this person was rabbi feiner. There was another picture of the same gentile in the same house with rabbi feiner included.
Obviously the non-Jew has the right to do this, as the chometz belongs to him. After Pesach, however, when the chometz is sold back to the original owners, will the Jewish person have to pay less, due to there being less bourbon than when he originally sold it?
Well it’s a little bit the other way around.
The Goy only makes a downpayment before pesach and then if he chooses after pesach to keep the chometz, he is required to pay the full value of what he wants to keep.
So yes, if he took some chometz, he will have to pay for the value of what he took.
I don’t get it
The point of this article is to show that the sale is real and the goy has every right to invade your privacy of your home and he can come and take what he wants. Anyone that doesnt “get it” or refuses entry of the goy, makes his sale null and void and is oiver on chometz sheaver al pesach
the goy still has to pay for what he takes. just like in the times of jewish rule when the kinyanim were done with meshicha, but of course people made a living. ask any rav
What’s the story with the Yankees?
Nothing missing from the story. Good job by the rabbanim making the sale real
When they bought it back from him they told him that what he took was on-the-house (with the reshus of the baalei batim)