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From the Persian poet Rumi through the Old Testament Israelites to the political protests of the suffragettes, New Generation Thinker Christopher Kissane, of the London School of Economics, explores the history of fasting. Eating and avoiding hunger are our most basic goals, yet for thousands of years people have deliberately denied themselves food as an act of faith or conscience. What is the history of fasting, and why do billions still fast today?
Recorded with an audience at the York Festival of Ideas in 2017
Producer: Jacqueline Smith.
Image: Christopher Kissane. Credit: Ian Martindale.
By BBC Radio 34.2
8282 ratings
From the Persian poet Rumi through the Old Testament Israelites to the political protests of the suffragettes, New Generation Thinker Christopher Kissane, of the London School of Economics, explores the history of fasting. Eating and avoiding hunger are our most basic goals, yet for thousands of years people have deliberately denied themselves food as an act of faith or conscience. What is the history of fasting, and why do billions still fast today?
Recorded with an audience at the York Festival of Ideas in 2017
Producer: Jacqueline Smith.
Image: Christopher Kissane. Credit: Ian Martindale.

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