- Gid
Hanasheh (Hebrew: גִּיד הַנָּשֶׁה Gīḏ hanNāše,
literally "forgotten sinew",
often translated as "displaced tendon") is the term for
sciatic nerve in...
-
sciatic nerve block.
According to
Jewish law, the
sciatic nerve (Hebrew: Gid
hanasheh) may not be
eaten by Jews to
commemorate Jacob's
injury in his struggle...
-
making an
animal kosher by
removing chelev (forbidden fats) and the gid
hanasheh (sciatic nerve). The
basis for this
practice is
Leviticus 7:23, "You shall...
- law, and
certain parts of
these animals,
including certain fats and gid
hanasheh (the
sciatic nerve), may not be consumed.
Anything that is
inside an animal...
- 11:41–11:42.
Birds of prey are
forbidden according to
Leviticus 11:13–11:19. Gid
hanasheh is
forbidden per
Genesis 32:33.
Mixtures of milk and meat are not prepared...
- that is kosher. As
forbidden fats, tendons,
blood vessels and the gid
hanasheh (sciatic nerve) must be removed, more
difficult in the rear-quarters, often...
- not
overpower Jacob, he
touched Jacob on the
sinew of his
thigh (the gid
hanasheh, גיד הנשה), and, as a result,
Jacob developed a limp (Genesis 32:31). Because...
-
injury Jacob suffered while wrestling,
Jewish law
prohibits eating the gid
hanasheh (sciatic nerve),
which p****es
through the hip socket,
requiring it to be...
-
permitted fish.
Insects and
larvae are
forbidden in
Leviticus 11:41–42. Gid
hanasheh is
forbidden in
Genesis 32:33.
Mixtures of milk and meat are not prepared...
-
sheep must be
removed by a
process called nikkur. The
twisted nerve (gid
hanasheh)—the
sciatic nerve, as
according to
Genesis 32:32 the
patriarch Jacob's...