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Tu
B'Shevat
January 28,
2002 (Hebrew year: 5762)
January 18, 2003 (Hebrew year: 5763)
February 7, 2004 (Hebrew year 5764)
January 25, 2005 (Hebrew year 5765)
A brief history of
Tu B'Shevat
Tu B'Shevat is the
beginning of a new cycle for the tithe on fruit trees. Before the
destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem in 70 C.E., 10
percent of all produce was set aside for the support of the
priestly class and the poor.
Tu B'Shevat (which
means "the 15th of the month of Shevat") marks the
beginning of a new fiscal year for tithing.
While the temple is
no longer standing, the principles that lie at the foundation of
the practice of tithing are eternally relevant.
According to Jewish
tradition, "The earth is the Eternal's and all that it
holds" (Psalms 24:1). "The Land must not be sold beyond
reclaim, for the land is Mine" (Leviticus 25:23). The land is
not ours do to with as we please. We must be responsible stewards
of both the land we inhabit and its produce.
According to the
biblical tradition, this requires sharing the bounty of the land
with those in need, allowing the land to rest during the
sabbatical year (every seventh year), redistributing land every 50
years (the Jubilee) and maintaining the integrity of the land so
it will sustain future generations.
Though Tu B'Shevat no
longer serves its original fiscal function, Jewish communities
have continued to celebrate the New Year of Trees as a minor
festival. In the 1600s, Jewish mystics in Safed created a Tu
B'Shevat seder modeled after the Passover seder. Participants eat
four different categories of fruit and drink four different
combinations of red and white wine or grape juice, symbolizing the
four seasons and the mystical "four worlds."
The early pioneers of
the State of Israel began the practice of celebrating Tu B'Shevat
by planting trees.
In recent years,
Jewish communities around the world have begun to celebrate Tu
B'Shevat as a "Jewish Earth Day'' — organizing seders,
tree-plantings, ecological restoration activities and educational
events, all of which provide an opportunity to express a Jewish
commitment to protecting the earth.
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