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Running Title: FASTING

Fasting
(MLA Format)

[Author's Name]
[Instructor's Name]
[Course title]
[Date]
Fasting


Nutrition may be conveniently divided into two phases positive and negative corresponding to periods of eating and periods of abstaining from food. Negative nutrition has received the terms fasting, inanition, and starvation. Fasting and starving are separate phenomena well demarked from each other? Inanition covers both these processes.

Fast is derived from the Anglo-Saxon word, faest, which means "firm" or "fixed." The practice of going without food at certain times was called fasting, from the Anglo-Saxon, faesten, to hold oneself from food. Like most English words, the word fasting has more than one meaning. Thus, the dictionary defines fasting as "abstinence from food, partial or total, or from proscribed kinds of foods." In most religious fasts abstinence from proscribed foods is all that is meant.

We may define it thus: Fasting--is abstention, entirely or in part, and for longer or shorter periods of time, from food and drink or from food alone.
"Fasting, as we employ the term, is voluntary and entire abstinence from all food except water."Little driblet meals," says Dr. Chas. E. Page, "are not fasting. There should not be a mouthful or sip of anything but water, a few swallows of which would be taken from time to time, according to desire." (Sheikh Muhammad Salih Al-Munajjid, 1988).We do not employ the word fasting to describe a diet of fruit juice, for example.

Inanition is a technical term literally meaning emptiness, which is applied to all forms and stages of abstinence from food and to many forms of malnutrition due to various causes, even though the person is eating. Prof. Morgulis classifies three types of inanition according to origin, as follows:

1. "Physiological inanition, which is a normal, regular occurrence in nature. The inanition constitutes either a definite phase in the life cycle of the animal, it is a seasonal event, or it accompanies the periodic recurrence of sexual activity." The cases of the salmon and seal and of hibernating animals are examples of this.

2. "Pathological inanition," which is in "various degrees of severity associated with different organic derangements"--obstruction of the alimentary canal (oesophageal stricture)," "inability to retain food (vomiting)," "excessive destruction of body tissues (infectious fevers)," and "refusal to take food either because of loss of appetite or mental disease."

3. "Accidental or Experimental Inanition." "In this category, of course, belong all individual experiences which has been the subject of carefully conducted scientific investigation." In spite of these side effects, quacks like to tell people that fasting is different from starving. They say that in fasting, the body relies on stored reserves so it doesn't get hungry. In starving, the body has nothing to eat at all.

However logical that distinction sounds, the body can't be fooled. It can't tell the difference between fasting for spiritual reasons or starving during famine. All it knows it that it isn't getting enough food and it will do what it can to keep you alive. If stored reserves are depleted, death follows. "A prolonged fast can lead to anemia, impairment of liver function, kidney stones, mineral imbalances, and other undesirable side effects. Deaths due to prolonged fasting have occurred, usually in people who believe this would 'purify' their body or cure them of some disease," said Barrett, a board member of the National Council Against Health Fraud, Inc.

If you're considering fasting, follow the recommendations of the Department of Health and US Public Health Service: Never fast for more than a day for religious or other reasons. Be wary of those who promise freedom from illness with fasting. That path won't bring you enlightenment but will lead you straight to hell.

Fasting is a rest--a physiological vacation. It is neither an ordeal nor a penance. It is a house-cleaning measure which deserves to be better known and more widely used.

Islam has widely propagated fasting and has included it in one of the salient features. Fasting, or siyaam, has two meanings. Generally, siyaam or sawm, is derived from the root sama, to restrain from normal things, such as eating, drinking, and talking. If an individual refrains from these things, he is considered saaim, the observer of fast.

In the Shari'ah, Islamic law, the word "sawm" means and implies a specific act, that, is, "to worship Allah, abstaining, with intention to please Him from fast breakers, such as physical nourishment, food, drink, and sexual intercourse or a lustful discharge of semen from the period between the break of dawn until sundown.

In a hadith by Abu Hurairah (raa), the Prophet (saas) said: "Fasting is not only to restrain from food and drink, fasting is to refrain from obscene (acts). If someone verbally abuses you or acts ignorantly towards you, say (to them) 'I am fasting; I am fasting.'" (Ibn Khuzaimah)
Indeed, these two reports imply fasting will not be complete until one observes three elements:

1. Restraining the stomach and the private parts from the breakers of the fast - food and drink.

2. Restraining the jawarih, the other body parts, which may render the fast worthless despite the main factors of hunger and thirst; so the tongue, for instance, must avoid backbiting, slander, and lies; the eyes should avoid looking into things considered by the Lawgiver as unlawful; the ears must stop from listening to conversations, words, songs, and lyrics that spoil the spirit of fasting.

3. Restraining of the heart and mind from indulging themselves in other things besides dhikir Allah (remembrance of Allah). [Archpriest Victor Potapov, 1988]

References
English Essay Sheikh Muhammed Salih Al-Munajjid, 'Al-Siyaam', 70 Matters Related to Fasting, 1988, pg 92.
English EssayArchpriest Victor Potapov. The Lenten Fast, Parish Life. March, 1988. www.stjohndc.org/lent/8803.htm

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