The fast is observed on the third of
Tishrei in the
Hebrew calendar. This is the day after the second day of
Rosh Hashanah. The
Gregorian (civil) date for the Fast of Gedalia varies from year to year. When
Rosh Hashanah falls on Thursday and Friday, the fast is postponed until Sunday (which would be the fourth of
Tishrei), since no public fast may be observed on
Shabbat (Saturday) with the exception of
Yom Kippur. That was most recently the case in 2024. Dates of the fast in recent years: • 2020: Monday, September 21 • 2021: Thursday, September 9 • 2022: Wednesday, September 28 • 2023: Monday, September 18 • 2024: Sunday, October 6 • 2025: Thursday, September 25 ==Observances== The fast is observed from dawn until dusk. As with all fast days, the
hazzan includes the prayer
Aneinu in the repetition of the
Amidah during
Shacharit and
Mincha as a separate Bracha between the prayers for redemption and healing, and individuals recite it in the private recitation of the
amidah as an addition to Shema Koleinu (general prayer acceptance); in the Ashkenazic tradition it is recited by individuals only
Mincha, in the Sephardic tradition in
Shacharit and Mincha, and in the Yemenite tradition it is recited even at
Maariv the night before the fast. The
Avinu Malkeinu prayer is recited and as it is during the
Ten Days of Repentance the additions reference the new year. A
Torah scroll is taken from the ark and the passages of
Ki Tissa are read from the Torah (Exodus 32:11–14 and 34:1–10). The same
Torah reading is added at
Mincha, followed in Ashkenazic congregations by a
Haftarah reading. but some Sephardic communities do recite additional supplications at this time as well. In the Spanish and Portuguese rite, the prayers are recited from the Book of Prayers for Fast Days. There are lengthy additions to the prayers that are not found in the daily and Sabbath
siddur, and that are specific to the day as well as prayers that are common to all the fast days with the exception of
Yom Kippur. ==References==