• • Spirituality OLJ AY 101 Tu B'Shevat At A Glance Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News W hat the words mean: Shevat is the name of a month on the Jewish calendar. Because in the Hebrew alphabet each letter also rep- resents a numerical value, the number 15 is written as tet vav, which forms the acro- nym Tu. The second part, b'Shevat, means "in Shevat." Thus, Tu b'Shevat means "15th of Shvat." •When it occurs this year: Monday, Feb. 9 • What it is: Tu b'Shevat does not appear in the written Torah. It is known from its reference in the Talmudic tractate, Rosh Hashanha. In Halachah (Jewish law), the 15th day of the month of Shevat is desig- nated as the cut-off date for tithing fruits from trees. In ancient Israel's agrarian economy, every Jewish farmer gave a percentage of his produce to the priests and Levites to maintain the Temple in Jerusalem. In Hebrew, this is known as teruma, a tithe. Tree-borne fruit that came from blossoms formed before the 15th of Shevat belonged to the current tithing year, and fruit from blossoms that formed after the 15th were designated for the next year. The laws of Tu b'Shevat applied only in the Land of Israel, so Jewish farmers in other parts of the world did not set aside fruit. Tu b'Shevat is often referred to as the "new year of the trees!' The source of this designation is the Torah. In Parshat Kedoshim (Leviticus 19:23- 25), the Torah teaches us that we may not harvest fruit from a tree's first three years of production. How do we calculate these years? On Tu b'Shevat, every tree is regarded as another year old — no matter when in the previous year it was planted. Thus, if a farmer planted a tree at any time prior to the 15th of Shevat — even on the 14th of Shevat — come Tu b'Shevat, that tree is one more year old. • How it is observed: Today, whether in or outside of Israel, there is no tith- ing because there is no Temple (the Muslim Dome of the Rock and the Al Aksa Mosque occupy the Temple site. For most Jews in ancient times, Tu b'Shevat was nothing more than a book- keeping day. Through the generations, however, the 15th took on spiritual characteristics. Over the gen- erations, rabbis attached spiri- tual significance to the day, seeing new fruit as symbolic of new hope, new beginnings and new opportunities. Tu b'Shevat was especially embraced by Sephardic Jews, and in the 16th century, by the Jewish mystics of Tzefat (a town in northern Israel, often transliterated as Safad), and the authors of the Kabbalah. The mystics developed many customs for the day, including liturgical readings and a moting Tu b'Shevat as the ideal time to donate money for the acquisition of land and the planting of trees in the rocky soil of the ancient Jewish home- land. The concept was eagerly embraced by Jewish communities across the dias- pora. Even now, Tu b'Shevat is also JNF day. Blue-and-white JNF coin boxes are distributed throughout Jewish schools, and the money collected goes toward various projects in Israel. Although these days the JNF is most concerned with finding ways of conserving Israel's precious and feeble natural water resources, it still sponsors a day of tree planting. For environmentalists, Tu b'Shevat is an excellent opportunity to teach the tremendous economic and environ- mental values of trees. Many of earth's ecosystems, and all of the atmosphere, depend on trees. A renewable resource, trees provide us with food, fuel, fiber, paper, housewares, building materi- als, chemicals and many other useful products. Trees planted in urban areas greatly reduce summer heat that builds up in concrete-covered neighborhoods, and trees put in the right spots around your house can keep your air-condition- ing bills to a minimum. Trees planted in windbreaks help farmers conserve their crops and topsoil; and trees along rivers, streams and hillsides keep soil in place, reducing siltage and landslides. The beauty of natural woodlands is unmatched, and natural forests are home to countless species of animals and plants. Humans and animals breathe in oxygen and breathe out oolA carbon dioxide. Trees breathe in carbon dioxide and breathe out oxygen. Without trees, life would disappear. ritual meal based on the Pesach seder, complete with four cups of wine. For most Sephardic Jews today, Tu b'Shevat is a festive day. Among all Jews, however, it is customary to eat fruit from trees, especially fruit imported from Israel, or that by tradition, are native to Israel. Based on a verse in Parshat Eykev (Deuteronomy 8:8), these are: wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranates, olives, dates. Since wheat, barley and grapes do not grow on trees, it has become the practice to enjoy any fruit produced on trees, such as apples, pears, oranges (all of the standard fruits and • Rules and regulations: Tachnun, the many exotic fruits are grown in modern penitential daily prayer, is not recited. Israel). Some recite Psalm 104 (Borchi Nafshi) and In the early 1900s, the Jewish National also the 15 psalms that begin Shir Ha- Fund, which was buying and developing Maalot ("Song of Ascent"): 120-134. Li. land in Palestine for Jewish settlement, seized upon Tu b'Shevat for its market- The Web site Jewish Education and ing potential. Because the JNF improved Entertainment (www.j.co.il) provides land by planting trees, it began pro- several holiday features. elir February 5 • 2009 A29