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by Rebbetzin Ruthie
Karlinsky
It’s cold outside, raining, maybe even snowing….
It’s the middle of the winter for most of us;
Chanukah is long gone and Purim and Pesach are
still a few months away. It’s the month of Shvat
and on the fifteenth day we celebrate Tu B’Shvat.
But what celebration are we actually talking about?
What’s so special about this day?
Most of us associate Tu B’Shvat with trees and
the beautiful minhag of eating fruits from Eretz
Yisrael, especially fruits from the seven species.
When we were kids, we received a special treat
in school on Tu B’Shvat: A piece of a carob pod
from Israel called “bokser”. It looked like a
brown stone from the petrified forest, but if
you sucked all of it during recess, it began to
give off a faint sweet taste and with a little
imagination, you could picture that carob pod
growing in Israel. (Today one needs no imagination
to conjure up what grows in Israel. A short walk
through the ‘shuk’ will reveal an impressive array
of produce, much of which is shipped abroad.)
But there has to be more to Tu B’Shvat than “bokser”.
Halachically Tu B’Shvat is a Rosh Hashana for
the tree. According to the Rabbis (Masechet Rosh
Hashana), this is the day of the year that separates
the previous year from the upcoming year with
respect to fruit grown on trees, since most of
the rains have already fallen in Israel by then
and the sap is beginning to rise. As a result,
fruit already formed on the trees by that time
is a product of that year's rainfall. This is
the day that determines the fruits of the previous
year’s crop for the purpose of tithing – a kind
of end and beginning of the “fiscal year” for
trees. As a Rosh Hashana, Tu B’Shvat is also a
day of judgement for the trees. What kind of year
will it be for the trees and for the fruit they
produce? There is actually religious significance
to this day, insofar as we do not say Tachanun
in Shacharit or in the previous Mincha prayer;
neither do we fast or eulogize the deceased. Does
this day of Tu B’Shvat have significance to us
as well as to the trees?
In Devarim 20:19 we read of the injunction against
cutting down fruit trees even in times of war,
“…You shall not destroy its tree by striking an
axe against it, for you shall eat of it and not
cut it down; for man is a tree of the field…”
For Man is a tree of the field! Trees are often
used as a metaphor for a human being. Just like
a tree, man puts down roots, extends his ‘branches’
and produces fruit/offspring. (A projective technique
developed by a clinical psychologist utilizes
an individual’s drawing of a tree as a means to
assess his basic personality.) If we are likened
to trees, then Tu B’Shvat is to some degree a
Rosh Hashana or a new year for us, too. Perhaps
this should be a day to contemplate and see how
our ‘tree’ is doing. Are we putting down the proper
roots in the proper place? Are we letting them
sink deep enough before we put energy into other
parts of the ‘tree’? Are we grounded? Are we strong
enough but flexible enough to withstand strong
winds?
A tree that bends can withstand a storm, but one
that doesn’t, snaps. Are our branches reaching
out to help others? Are they producing leaves
that can shade others from harsh conditions? What
are we doing now to ensure that we produce sweet,
healthy fruit in the future? The sage Choni HaM’agel
once saw a man planting a carob tree and asked
him: How long does it take for this tree to bear
fruit? The man replied: Seventy years. He further
asked him: Are you sure that you will live another
seventy years? The man replied: I found fully
grown carob trees in the world because my forefathers
planted them for me; so too, I plant these trees
for my children. Perhaps that was the lesson of
the “bokser”.
According to tradition, Moshe read the Book of
Devarim (Mishneh Torah) to Bnei Yisrael starting
on the first of Shvat, and finishing on the seventh
of Adar. The average person listening to Moshe
speak about rebuke and encouragement, and hearing
his explanations of the various mitzvot, began
to feel spiritual growth on the 15th of Shvat
– Tu B’Shvat. We may assume that this day of Tu
B’Shvat is a propitious time for spiritual growth.
So, by all means, celebrate Tu B’Shvat with the
eating of the fruits of Eretz Yisrael, but don’t
forget to take advantage of the spiritual nature
of this new year as well.
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