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Gentiles and Jewish law
Judaism has always held that people who are not Jews are only obliged to follow the seven Noahide Laws; these are laws that the Oral Law derives from the covenant God made with Noah after the flood, which Judaism holds apply to all descendants of Noah, i.e., all living people. The Noahide laws are derived in the Talmud (Tractate Sanhedrin 57a), and are listed here:


 * Murder is forbidden.
 * Theft is forbidden.
 * Sexual immorality, including homosexuality, is forbidden.
 * Eating flesh cut from a still-living animal is forbidden.
 * Belief in and worship of, or prayer to, "idols" is forbidden.
 * Blaspheming against God is forbidden.
 * Society must establish a fair system of legal justice to administer law honestly.

The details of these laws are codified from the Talmudic texts in the Mishneh Torah. They can be found mainly in chapters 9 and 10 of Hilkhoth Melakhim u'Milhamotehem in Sefer Shoftim, the fourteenth book of the Mishneh Torah.

Halakhic rulings on the attitude towards gentiles
According to all rabbis the Halakhic rulings differ on whether the Beit-Din has enough authority to implement its rulings. When not in enough power darke shalom

During war
According to most opinions, during a war any person from the gentile enemy nations may be killed.