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The fruity festival not just for tree huggers

Turn over a new leaf by celebrating New Year for the Trees

February 5, 2009 14:50
A Jewish fruit-seller

By

Ruth Joseph

3 min read

Tu B’Shvat, the New Year for Trees and one of the most beautiful events in the Jewish calendar, is considered a minor festival and often neglected. But it can be special, particularly for food-lovers. Tu B’Shvat, the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shvat, was established by Talmudic rabbinate to determine the age of trees and calculate when they could be harvested.

The Torah says that after a fruit-tree has been planted, the fruit cannot be eaten for three years. Then the following year, that fruit is for God only, and only after that can it be harvested. The anticipation of watching a sapling grow, and waiting for five years to taste the fruits, merits a celebration in itself.

Why are trees so important in Jewish custom? Many rabbis believe that the tree is a metaphor for man; that we are cold during the winter but in the spring, the blood or sap begins to rise again.

We talk of a Tree of Life — Etz Chaim — and often the Torah is seen as a tree that cares for us and nurtures our minds. And the wooden poles that support the Sefer Torah are called etzim, meaning trees. Then again the Chasidic communities will take the last year’s etrog which they pickled or candied, taste it on this festival and pray that this year’s fruit — whether that be success in bearing children, spiritual, educational, or financial — will exceed last year’s.

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