Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv: A City Without Cars

Yom Kippur is the most sacred day in the Jewish calendar. Known as the Day of Atonement, it is a time of fasting, reflection, and spiritual renewal for Jews around the world. In Israel, and especially in cities like Tel Aviv, the entire country slows to a halt. Roads empty, businesses close, television and radio broadcasts stop, and a silence settles over the city. In this video, I document what Yom Kippur looks and feels like in Tel Aviv. As someone exploring culture, belief, and identity across the Middle East, I was fascinated by the way this Jewish holiday is marked not just in synagogues, but across public space, both religious and secular. In 2022, I spent Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv, capturing both the deeply spiritual observances inside places of worship and the uniquely Israeli street culture that emerges outside them. On Yom Kippur, religious Jews attend synagogue services and fast for 25 hours, refraining from food, drink, and physical comforts in order to focus on repentance, prayer, and moral accounting. It is a day to ask for forgiveness from God and from other people. With a local Rabbi, I organised filming the Neilah service at the close of the fast, where he led prayers central to Jewish atonement and reflection that have been practiced for centuries. But Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv also reveals a different, more secular tradition. With roads completely closed to vehicles, the streets become filled with people walking, riding bicycles, rollerblading, or simply enjoying the silence in a city that never sleeps. Children cycle down highways, families stroll down the middle of major boulevards, on a day unlike any in the Israeli calendar. For many secular Jews in Tel Aviv, this day has become a kind of cultural sabbath, blending religious roots with a modern, civic form of observance. This documentary captures both sides of that contrast. I speak to locals who describe what the day means to them, from deeply observant Jews seeking spiritual cleansing, to secular Israelis who see Yom Kippur as a moment of collective stillness. The diversity of experience reflects the diversity of Jewish identity in Israel itself. Yom Kippur comes as part of a larger cycle of Jewish holidays known as the High Holy Days, or the Days of Awe. This period begins with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and ends with Yom Kippur, creating a ten-day period of introspection and repentance. It is a time when people reflect on their actions over the past year and seek to start anew. While many Jewish holidays are joyous and celebratory, Yom Kippur is traditionally solemn and introspective. For religious Jews, there are no festive meals or public parties. Instead, the emphasis is on personal responsibility, ethical living, and reconciliation. Whether you are Jewish, curious about Judaism, or simply interested in global traditions, this is a window into the holiest day of the Jewish year and what it means in modern Israel. As part of my journey documenting belief, identity, culture, and politics around the world, this story forms one small piece of a wider series. If you enjoy independent, on-the-ground storytelling, please consider subscribing or supporting my work through Patreon:   / tieranfreedman   These documentaries are self-funded and created during long-term travel across the region, aiming to make complex topics accessible to a global audience. Thank you for watching. 00:00-01:03 - Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv: Introduction 01:04-02:45 - DISCLAIMER 02:46-04:54 - Rules for Jewish Holy Days: A Rabbi Helps Out 04:55-08:22 - A Secular Start to Yom Kippur 08:23-09:25 - Is Everyone Happy to See Cyclists on Yom Kippur? 09:26-11:14 - Tashlich: Jews Casting Sins into the Water 11:15-13:09 - Bicycles on Highways for Yom Kippur: Tel Aviv’s Silent Streets 13:10-18:37 - Inside a Yom Kippur Synagogue Service 18:38-19:30 - Breaking the Fast after Yom Kippur 19:31-21:12 - The Many Faces of Judaism #yomkippur #judaism #worldreligions #dayofatonement #holyday