Full fast A Jewish full fast lasts from sunset to darkness the following night. There are two Jewish full fast days: •
Yom Kippur – the only fast day mentioned in the
Torah (Leviticus 23:26-32) •
Tisha B'Av The two full fast days carry four restrictions in addition to eating and drinking – one may not wash one's body, wear leather shoes, use colognes, oils or perfumes, or have sexual relations. Yom Kippur also has all the restrictions of
Shabbat, and Tisha B'Av has restrictions somewhat similar to a mourner sitting
shiva. The Halakha status of the two Jewish full fasts is that they are obligatory.
Minor fasts Minor fasts are observed from dawn to nightfall, without additional restrictions. There are four public minor fasts: •
Fast of Gedalia (Tzom Gedalia) •
Tenth of Tevet (Asara B'Tevet) •
Fast of Esther (Ta'anit Esther) •
Seventeenth of Tammuz (Shiva Asar B'Tammuz) There are additional fasts that are practiced in some communities or by individuals, but are not universally observed like the ones listed above. Since these are dependent on local custom, it is impossible to give a comprehensive list. Nevertheless, some of the most commonly observed ones include: •
Fast of Behav •
Yom Kippur Katan •
Shovevim Liturgy During the four minor fasts a number of changes is made to the liturgy: • The Torah portion for Fast Days (Exodus 32:11-14, 34:1-10), commonly called
VaYechal after the first word of the portion, is read during the
Shacharit and
Mincha services. After the Torah Reading at the Mincha service,
Ashkenazi communities read the
Haftorah for Fast Days (Isaiah 55:6-56:8), which is commonly called Dirshu after its first word. • During the Shacharit service,
Selichot are recited. • In most communities which follow the Eastern Ashkenazic rite,
Avinu Malkeinu is recited during the Shacharit and Mincha services except at occasions when
Tachanun is omitted. It is not recited on fast days in the Western Ashkenazic rite or by Sephardim, and a few Eastern Ashkenazic communities still follow the older practice of reciting it only during the
Ten Days of Repentance. •
Aneinu is by the
Chazzan as its own blessing during the Shacharit and Mincha services. Individuals recite it as in addition in the
Shema Koleinu blessing of the
Amidah; in Ashkenazic communities, it is recited by individuals only at Mincha, in
Sephardic communities it is recited also during the Shacharit service, and in some Yemenite communities it is recited even in the Maariv service on the night before the fast, even though the fast has not yet begun.
Four fasts The major and minor fasts that commemorate events having to do with the destruction of the
Jerusalem Temple are called the
four fasts. They are: • Ninth of Av (Tisha B'Av, full fast) • Fast of Gedalia (Tzom Gedalia, minor fast) • Tenth of Tevet (Asara B'Tevet, minor fast) • Seventeenth of Tammuz (Shiva Asar B'Tammuz, minor fast) The minor fasts are mentioned in the
Book of Zechariah as fasts in memory of the destruction of the
First Temple.
Zechariah 7 mentions the fasts in the fifth and seventh months, and
Zechariah 8 mentions four dates: "the fast of the fourth month and the fast of the fifth and the fast of the seventh and the fast of the tenth". However, after the
Second Temple was built, these fasts ceased to be observed. The
Talmud establishes general rules for observance of the fasts in later periods: if the Temple stands the fasts are not observed and instead have the status of
Yom Tov and observed as holidays; if the Jewish people are being persecuted the fasts are observed; if neither of those is the case, then "should they desire, they fast, should they desire not to, they do not fast." Nowadays, the Jewish people are accustomed to observing these fasts, making them obligatory.
Customary fasts Customary fasts are only practiced by specific communities, or by especially pious individuals, or by certain classes of individuals. Most of these fasts, like the minor fasts, last from dawn to dusk. •
Fast of the Firstborn, Ta'anit Bechorot, observed on the day preceding
Passover. •
Yom Kippur Katan (literally, the little Yom Kippur) – held on the day before
Rosh Hodesh in most months. •
Fast of Behav – This is a custom to fast on the first Monday, Thursday and then the following Monday of the Jewish months of Cheshvan and Iyar—shortly following the Sukkot and Passover holidays. •
Shovavim Tat, 6 or 8 weeks of repentance when the first 6 or 8 liturgical readings from Exodus are read. Some fast every day (except Shabbat), some once or twice a week, either Monday and Thursday, Thursday only, or Friday only. • Fast commemorating the
Khmelnytsky massacres, held on
Twentieth of Sivan. • Fast of Samuel: Held on 28th Iyar. Not widely observed. • Fast of Moses on
Seventh of Adar. • A custom exists for a bride and groom to fast on the day of their wedding. It is observed by Ashkenazi and some Sephardi Jews. (This applies both to those who are marrying for the first time and to those who are remarrying.) They fast from daybreak until after the
chuppah, eating their first meal during their
yichud seclusion at the end of the ceremony. This custom is not recorded in the Talmud, and first appears in
Sefer HaRokeach. Customarily, special prayers called selichot are added in the morning prayer services on many of these days.
Breaking the fast A
break fast is a meal that takes places following a fast. After Yom Kippur, it is viewed as a festive meal. To avoid indigestion, some choose to avoid heavy foods such as meat, observe a
custom of eating light dairy foods in moderation. == Other abstentions from food ==