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Upvas (also rendered as upavasa, upavaas or upwas in various Indian languages) refers broadly to the practice of religious fasting in the Hindu tradition. The term is widely understood across many Hindu communities in India and the diaspora, though specific rules, permitted foods, durations and associated rituals vary considerably between regions, sects, family traditions and the particular occasion on which the fast is observed. In general usage, upvas covers a spectrum that ranges from complete abstinence from food and water to partial fasts in which only certain categories of foods are consumed, often described as phalahar (fruit-based diet) or vrat meals.
This draft is intended strictly as an internal scaffold for IndiaWiki editors. It outlines neutral background, identifies areas where verification is required, and suggests an article structure. It deliberately avoids asserting precise scriptural citations, dates, regional statistics, or contested theological claims that have not been independently checked. Editors are requested to expand each section with verifiable references from reputable scholarly works, primary religious texts (with proper citation), and reliable secondary sources before publication. Particular care should be taken when describing health-related aspects of fasting, since these may have implications for readers.
Fasting as a religious and ascetic practice has a long history within the broader Indic religious landscape, and the term upvas appears in a variety of textual and devotional contexts. Etymologically, the Sanskrit upavasa is generally understood to convey a sense of "dwelling near" or "staying close to" — frequently interpreted as being close to the divine through the discipline of restraint. Editors should verify the precise etymological breakdown (typically attributed to the prefix upa- combined with a verbal root) against authoritative Sanskrit lexicons before including it in the published article.
Historically, references to fasting practices appear in a wide range of Hindu literature, including the Dharmashastra corpus, the Puranas, and various devotional and sectarian texts. Different schools and traditions — Vaishnava, Shaiva, Shakta, Smarta, and others — have developed their own conventions about when and how an upvas is to be observed. Folk and household traditions, often transmitted orally and through family custom, add a further layer of variation. Editors are encouraged to treat the practice as a living tradition with both textual and customary dimensions, rather than as a single codified ritual, and to flag any region- or sect-specific claim accordingly.
The significance attached to upvas is typically discussed along several overlapping dimensions: the devotional, the ethical, the social and the personal. In devotional terms, fasting is often described as a form of offering or discipline directed towards a chosen deity, frequently linked with specific calendar days, lunar phases or festival occasions. Ethically, traditional commentaries tend to emphasise self-restraint, mindfulness and the cultivation of inner qualities, with the abstention from food framed as one component of a broader discipline that may include prayer, recitation, charity and silence.
Socially, upvas can function as a marker of identity and continuity, observed within families and communities and often involving shared rituals, special foods and collective worship. On a personal level, practitioners may describe motivations ranging from devotion and gratitude to vows for specific outcomes, remembrance of departed family members, or general well-being. Editors should be careful to present these motivations descriptively rather than prescriptively, and to avoid suggesting that any particular interpretation is universally accepted. Claims about spiritual or material "benefits" of fasting should be attributed to specific traditions or sources.
The following list is intended as a checklist of areas that frequently appear in writing on upvas and which require careful sourcing. Editors should not assume any of these points without independent verification.
The following section outline is offered as a starting template; editors may adapt it as required by the available sourcing.
This draft has been prepared deliberately as a scaffold rather than a finished article. Several considerations should guide the rewrite:
To be added by editors. Suggested categories of reference material include: standard Sanskrit-English dictionaries for etymology; critical editions and reputable translations of classical Hindu texts; peer-reviewed scholarly works on Hindu ritual and devotional practice; ethnographic studies of regional and community traditions; and authoritative encyclopaedic entries. Online sources should be evaluated for reliability before citation. All references must be formatted according to IndiaWiki's citation style guide, with access dates where applicable.