Fast of Esther - translation to italian
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Fast of Esther - translation to italian

FAST IN JUDAISM
Fast of esther; Fast of ester; Ta'anit Ester; Ta'anit Esther; תענית אסתר; Taanit Ester; Ta'nis Esther; Tanis Esther; Tanis Ester; Tanit Esther; Taanit Esther; Taanis Esther; Thirteenth of Adar; 13th day of Adar; 13 Adar

Fast of Esther         
digiuno di Ester (alla vigilia del Purim o carnevale ebraico)
Tanit Esther         
n. Tanit Esther, Digiuno di Ester, digiuno prima della festività ebraica del Purim
Book of Esther         
  • page=212}}</ref>
  • Scroll of Esther (Megillah)
  • The opening chapter of a hand-written scroll of the Book of Esther, with reader's [[Torah pointer]]
  • Esther is crowned in this 1860 woodcut by [[Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld]]
  • Mordecai is honoured in this 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld.
  • ''The Feast of Esther'' (''Feest van Esther'', 1625) by [[Jan Lievens]], [[North Carolina Museum of Art]].
BOOK
The Book of Esther; Book of Ester; Additions to Esther; Megillat Esther; Esther, Book of; Esth.; Scroll of Esther; Book of esther; Megilat Esther; Meggilah; Book Of Esther; Apocryphal Book of Esther; Additions to the Book of Esther; Apocryphal Book Of Esther; The Scroll of Esther; Rest of Esther; Rest of the Book of Esther; Historicity of the Book of Esther; The Megillah; Megillas Esther
Libro di Ester (Bibbia)

Definition

FAST
First Application System Test

Wikipedia

Fast of Esther

The Fast of Esther (Ta'anith Ester, Hebrew: תַּעֲנִית אֶסְתֵּר) is a fast on Purim eve commemorating two communal fasts undertaken by the Persian Jewish community of Shushan in the Book of Esther, for the purpose of praying for salvation from annihilation by an evil decree, which had been the instigated by the royal vizier, an anti-jewish enemy of the Amalekite nation.

This fast, unlike other fasts, is a custom. It is not mentioned in the Talmud, however is mentioned in the Midrash and other later sources from the days of the Gaonim. Therefore it is considered less severe than the other fasts.

Esther asked Mordechai to have the Jews fast and pray on her behalf for 3 days and 3 nights, before she approached her husband, king Ahasuerus to beg for the life of her people. Another is presumed to have occurred on the 13th of Adar, the day before the Jews fought a battle to defend against their enemies, who had been given an irrevocable permission to murder Jews for one day a year on the 14th of that month, which is now a Jewish holiday of Purim on account of their victory.

Before approaching the king unbidden at risk of her life Esther told Mordechai (Esther 4:16)

Go, gather together all the Jews that are present in Shushan, and fast ye for me, and neither eat nor drink three days, night or day; I also and my maidens will fast in like manner; and so will I go in unto the king, which is not according to the law; and if I perish, I perish.

Examples of use of Fast of Esther
1. By Sarah Breger Tags: women Yesterday, Jews all over the world commemorated Ta‘anit Esther (the Fast of Esther), the day on which the heroine of the Purim story took her fate and that of her people into her own hands.