Eruvin (Talmud)
Eruvin is the second tractate in the Order of Moed in the Talmud, dealing with the various types of. In this sense this tractate is a natural extension of Shabbat; at one point these tractates were likely joined but then split due to length.
The Ra'ya Mehemna introduced ענ״י as an acronym for "Eruvin, Niddah, and Yevamot". According to Jacob Emden, עני destitute is a pun which references the reputed difficulty of these tractates, and the acronym serves to warn off students. Eliezer Sofer uses it for "Eruvin, Nazir, Yevamot", arguing that Nazir is more difficult, and some also use "Eruvin, Nedarim, Yevamot".
Structure
The tractate consists of ten chapters with a total of 96 mishnayot. Its Babylonian Talmud version is of 105 pages and its Jerusalem Talmud version is of 65 pages.An overview of the content of chapters is as follows:
- Chapter 1 has ten mishnayot.
- Chapter 2 has six mishnayot.
- Chapter 3 has nine mishnayot.
- Chapter 4 has eleven mishnayot.
- Chapter 5 has nine mishnayot.
- Chapter 6 has ten mishnayot.
- Chapter 7 has eleven mishnayot.
- Chapter 8 has eleven mishnayot.
- Chapter 9 has four mishnayot.
- Chapter 10 has fifteen mishnayot.
Main subjects
Eruv Chatzeirot
An eruv is a ritual enclosure that permits Jewish residents or visitors to carry certain objects outside their own homes on Sabbath and Yom Kippur. An eruv accomplishes this by integrating a number of private and public properties into one larger private domain, thereby countermanding restrictions on carrying objects from the private to the public domain on Sabbath and holidays.The eruv allows these religious Jews to, among other things, carry house keys, tissues, medicines, or babies with them, and use strollers and canes. Orthodox Judaism prohibits motorized transportation on Shabbat and holidays, although the presence of an eruv for carrying permits certain types of non-motorized transport such as strollers and wheelchairs. The presence or absence of an eruv thus especially affects the lives of people with limited mobility and those responsible for taking care of babies and young children.