A
Shabbos goy,
Shabbat goy
or
Shabbes goy
(
Yiddish:
שבת גוי,
shabbos goy
Modern Hebrew:
גוי של שבת
goy shel shabat) is a
non-Jew
who performs certain types of work (
melakha) which Jewish religious law (
halakha) prohibits the Jew from doing on the
Sabbath. The phrase is a combination of the word "Shabbos" (שבת) meaning the
Sabbath, and
goy, which literally means "a nation" but colloquially means a "non-Jew" (in
Biblical Hebrew
"goy" means simply "a nation", but in
Mishnaic Hebrew
it is used in the sense of "a non-national", i.e., "a non-Jew").
Judaism prohibits Jews from doing certain types of work, known as
melakha, on the Sabbath. Within certain guidelines (see
Shulkhan Arukh), a non-Jew may perform certain acts which are beneficial to Jews but which may not be performed by Jews on the Sabbath. There are numerous restrictions
[1]
and certain types of work are prohibited, such as contractor work.
[2]