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Tu Bishvat
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Tu Bishvat The trees will have a birthday on Tuesday 22Jan: Tu Bishvat is here again, a minor Jewish holiday that is gaining in popularity. It takes its name from the Hebrew date: the 15th (15, when written with Hebrew letters for the numbers, is pronounced Tu) of the month Shvat. It is also called the New year of the Trees, Rosh haShana la'Ilanot. In Israel, it will be the full moon that heralds the coming spring; it is widely celebrated as 'plant a tree day'.
Originally Tu Bishvat simply served to decide to which year of a tree's life the harvest belonged: eating the first three harvests of a new tree was forbidden, the fourth was to be taken to the Temple; farmers had to wait for the fifth harvest for their own use. A piece of fruit that ripened after Tu Bishvat belonged to next year's harvest.
The great kabbalist Rabbi Yitzchak Luria (1534-1572) was the first to start celebrating a Tu Bishvat seider, and Sefardi
Jews around the world still keep this custom. The seider includes
drinking four glasses of wine, as in the Pesach seider, and many fruits are eaten, particularly the 'seven species' that charactarise Israel in the Tora: wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranate , olives and dates (Dewarim 8:8). |
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