Overview: Tu Bishvat Ideas & Beliefs
The name of this festival is actually its date:
"Tu" is a pronunciation of the Hebrew letters for the number 15, and
it falls in the Hebrew month of Shvat.
Traditionally, Tu Bishvat was not a Jewish festival. Rather,
it marked an important date for Jewish farmers in ancient times. The Torah
states, "When you enter the land [of Israel] and plant any tree for food,
you shall regard its fruit as forbidden. Three years it shall be forbidden for
you, not to be eaten" (Leviticus 19:23). The fruit of the fourth year was
to be offered to the priests in the Temple as a gift of gratitude for the
bounty of the land, and the fifth-year fruit--and all subsequent fruit--was
finally for the farmer. This law, however, raised the question of how farmers
were to mark the "birthday" of a tree. The Rabbis therefore
established the 15th of the month of Shvat as a general "birthday"
for all trees, regardless of when they were actually planted.
Fruit trees were awarded special status in the Torah because
of their importance in sustaining life and as a symbol of God's divine favor.
Even during times of war, God warns the Israelites, "When in your war
against a city you have to besiege it a long time in order to capture it, you
must not destroy its trees... Are trees of the field human to withdraw before
you into the besieged city? Only trees that you know do not yield food may be
destroyed" (Deuteronomy 20:19-20).
At a later time, the Rabbis of the Talmud established four
"new years" throughout the Jewish calendar--Rosh Hashanah, or the
Jewish new Year for the calendar date; a new year for establishing the reign of
kings; a new year for tithing animals of Jewish farmers to be given to the
Temple; and finally, Tu Bishvat, the new year for the trees (Mishnah, Rosh
Hashanah 1:1). The Rabbis discussed why this date was chosen; saying that Tu
Bishvat falls after mid-winter (usually in February), they concluded that the
majority of the annual rainfall has usually already fallen by this time in the
land of Israel, thus yielding a healthy, water-logged soil in which to plant
new trees (Talmud, Rosh Hashanah 57a).
In medieval times, kabbalists (Jewish mystics) gave Tu
Bishvat greater spiritual significance. Seeing in Tu Bishvat a vehicle for
mystical ideas, the kabbalists imbued Tu Bishvat with new religious significance
as well as created elaborate new symbolic rituals. According to Lurianic
Kabbalah (which is a form of mysticism studied by the students of Isaac Luria),
all physical forms--including human beings--hide within them a spark of the
Divine Presence. This is similar to some kinds of fruits or nuts, which hide
within them seeds of new life and potential growth. In Jewish mysticism, human
actions can release these sparks and help increase God's presence in the world.
On Tu Bishvat, the kabbalists would eat certain fruits associated with the land
of Israel as a symbolic way of releasing these divine sparks.
In modern times, Tu Bishvat has become a symbol of both
Zionist attachment to the land of Israel as well as an example of Jewish
sensitivity to the environment. Early Zionist settlers to Israel began planting
new trees not only to restore the ecology of ancient Israel, but as a symbol of
renewed growth of the Jewish people returning to their ancestral homeland.
While relatively few Jews continue to observe the kabbalistic Tu Bishvat seder,
many American and European Jews observe Tu Bishvat by contributing money to the
Jewish National Fund, an organization devoted to reforesting Israel.
For environmentalists, Tu Bishvat is an ancient and
authentic Jewish "Earth Day" that educates Jews about the Jewish
tradition's advocacy of responsible stewardship of God's creation as manifested
in ecological activism. Among them, contemporary versions of the Tu Bishvat
seder, emphasizing environmentalist concerns, are gaining popularity.