May Jews Violate (But Not Marry) Gentile Women?
The Talmud does not permit Jews to violate gentile women. The quote is usually attributed to "Gad. Shas 2:2" — a citation for a works that does not exist. It is not a tractate, chapter, or any classical Jewish work, and as Rabbi Jack Abramowitz notes, the "book" cannot be found in any rabbi's library or Jewish bookstore because it doesn't exist.
A secondary citation sometimes offered — Avodah Zarah 37a — also does not say what is claimed; it discusses ritual purity and betrothal status, not permission for any sexual act. The misreading is a variant of the same confusion addressed in the "3-year-old" canard.
Jewish law rules the opposite direction. Coercive sex (rape) is unambiguously forbidden — the Torah itself prescribes punishment for the rapist (Deuteronomy 22:25–27), and the prohibition applies regardless of the victim's identity. On top of that, Maimonides (Hilchot Issurei Biah 12:1–2) and the Shulchan Aruch (Even HaEzer 16:1) forbid all sexual relations between Jews and gentiles — marital or otherwise. There is no category in halacha where coercion is permitted but marriage forbidden.
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