  |                  Honi the Circle                    Maker
 
  |                    |                                  |                     The Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit page 23a tells the                    story of the sage Honi the Circle Maker, who could summon the                    rains to come within a circle he would draw on the                    ground.
  He saw an old man digging in he ground and he                    asked what he was doing.
  The old man said he was                    planting a carob tree.
  Honi remarked, "But a carob tree                    takes 70 years before it yields fruit. You won't get any                    carobs."
  The old man said, "My parents and my                    grandparents planted trees so that I could have fruit. I am                    planting trees so that my children and grandchildren should                    have fruit as well."
   |                                                                              |                  Blessing G!d  for                    Fruit
  |                    |                                   Blessed are You, Lord                    our G!d, King of the Universe, Who creates fruit of the                    tree.  
  Ba-Ruch a-ta A-do-shem El-o-khei-nu                    Mel-ech ha-o-lam, bo-rei p-ree                ha'etz.
 
  |                                                                              |                  Blessing G!d for the                    Holiday and Candle Lighting
  |                    |                                   Blessed are You, Lord                    our G!d, King of the Universe, Who has sanctified us with Your                    commandments, and has commanded us to light the candles of                    this holiday. 
  Ba-ruch A-ta A-do-shem, El-o-kha-nu                    Mel-ech ha-o-lam, a-sher Kid-di-sha-nu ba-mitz-vo-tav,                    vitz-se-vah-nu, la-had-lik ner, shel yom tov.                
  |                                                                              |                  Blessing G!d  for                    Bread
  |                    |                                  |                      Blessed are You, Lord our G!d, Who brings forth bread                    from the Earth.  
  Ba-ruch a-ta A-do-shem,                    El-o-khai-nu Mel-ech ha-O-lam, ha-Mot-zi lech-em min                    ha-er-etz. 
                        |                                                                              |                  Blessing G!d  for                    Wine
  |                    |                                  |                      Blessed are you Lord our G!d, King of the Universe,                    Who creates the fruit of the vine.
  Ba-Ruch A-tah                    A-do-shem, El-o-kha-nu Mel-eck ha-o-lam, bo-rah pe-ree                    ha-gah-fen. 
                        |                                                                                                      Click Here                    to Order Rabbi Arthur Segal's Books:
  The                    Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal:  A                    Path of Transformation for the Modern                    Jew
  A                    Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the  Torah                    and Talmud
 
  
  |    |                        |                                                                                                                                                 |                           Tu B' Shevat is the                          Jewish New Year for Trees
  A                          Holiday Message From Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish                          Spiritual Renewal                          January 2010
   |                       |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Shalom
                                 With my co-author, Frank Dunne,                                Jr., his family, and my family, I wish you and                                yours a happy and healthy 2010. May the New Year                                bring us all true Shalom and Shlema beyond human                                comprehension!                             
   |    |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Tu                                B' Shevat By the                                Numbers
  On the                                evening of January 29 and into January 30 we will                                celebrate the holiday of Tu B'Shevat, the Jewish                                New Year for Trees, which occurs on the 15th day                                of the Jewish month of                                Shevat.
 
                                                                 As many of you already know,                                Hebrew numerals are based on Hebrew letters.                                For example, the Hebrew numeral for 10 is a yud,                                and the Hebrew numeral for 5 is a hey. When we                                combine the yud and the hey, we get the Hebrew                                word for G!d: Y!H. 
  Since many do not wish                                to take the name of G!d in vain,15 is written                                using the numerals for the letters for 6 and 9.                                This gives the Hebrew letters tet and                                vuv. When these two letters are pronounced we                                get the acronym of Tu. 
  So the holiday                                means the 15th of the month of Shevat.                                 (The                                story of Tu B' Shevat continues                                below...)
 
    |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               |                                 Do You Have Trouble  Keeping New Year's                                Resolutions?                                                                                                Maybe                                You Need a Little Guidance.
  
  My book, The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                Jew, teaches you how to transform your life                                into one that is happier, more peaceful, and more                                spiritual.
  In this book, I distill the teachings of                                our sages and rabbis that have been passed                                along for thousands of years, along with lessons                                from the Torah and the Talmud.                                
  But                                unlike other Jewish spiritual texts that you may                                have read, or sermons you may have heard, this                                book presents these lessons in a concise,                                easy-to-read, easy-to-follow life transformation                                process that you can follow step-by-step at your                                own pace. 
  You                                will learn:                                                                 - That "normative" Judaism as you                                  have known it throughout your life is not really                                  Judaism at all, why it may leave you uninspired,                                  and how spiritual renewal will help you                                  recapture that inspiration (Chapter                                  1).
                                    - That your ego is your own worst                                  enemy, and how to win the battle against it                                  (Chapter 2).
                                    - How to stop struggling for                                  control over things you cannot control, and be                                  happier because of it (Chapter                                  3).
                                                                   - How spiritual renewal conquers                                  the fears and character flaws that are holding                                  you back in life (Chapters 4 and                                5).
                                                                  - To actually get rid of your                                  character flaws forever (Chapter                                6).
                                                                  - How to turn negative                                  relationships in your life positive
 (Chapter                                  7).                                                                  - How simple it is to make prayer                                  a regular part of your days...without going back                                  to Hebrew school (Chapter 8).
                                                                  - How to find peace of mind                                  through meditation (Chapter 9).
                                                                  - How to simplify life's toughest                                  decisions (Chapter 10).
                                                                  - How spiritual renewal                                  transforms you into the best individual you can                                  be, and how to stay on track (Chapter                                  11).
                                                                  - How to celebrate the Sabbath                                  and the Jewish Holidays with meaning (Chapters                                  12 and 13).
                                                                  - How to live with happiness,                                  joy, and freedom every day of your life (Chapter                                  14).
  Resolve                                to start your journey up the path to a happy and                                joyous life this year, and stay on track in the                                years to come.
  The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                Jew is only $19.99 (plus S&H) when                                you purchase your copy from Rabbi Arthur Segal's                                online bookstore. That's $5.00                                off the Amazon                                price.
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                                      |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               The Four Faces                                of Tu B' Shevat                                Tu B' Shevat has taken four                                different meanings over many millennia. At                                first it was a tax day for fruit from trees. In                                those days, the holiday was celebrated on the                                first of the month, not the 15th. 
  The Torah tells us not to eat fruit                                from a tree for its first three years, and to give                                the fruit to the Temple in the in the fourth and                                fifth years. Today, that would mean that we should                                give the fruit to those in need. To this day, many                                farmers in Israel obey this mitzvah. 
  Rabbi                                Hillel changed the holiday to the 15th of the                                month circa 100 B.C.E.
  In the 16th Century,                                the Kabbalists of Safed, Israel changed the                                meaning of Tu B' Shevat again. They celebrated the                                holiday with a seder and a Hagaddah to bring                                themselves closer to nature, and hence, closer to                                G!d.                                "All trees converse with one another                                 and with all                                living creatures."
                                 (Midrash Genesis Rabbah 13:2).                                The                                Kabbalists used fruits and nuts grown in the soil                                of Israel, and, similarly to a Passover Seder,                                there are four cups of wine. 
  But unlike                                the Passover Seder for which all four cups are                                red, the Kabbalistic Tu B' Shevat Seder has one                                white cup, one red cup, one mixture of mostly red                                with some white, and one mixture of mostly white                                with some red. 
  These four color patterns                                remind us of the four seasons and how God is                                continually with us throughout the                                year.To read more                                about Tu B' Shevat and how each fruit and nut is                                used symbolically please go to this link:                                                               RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: TU B' SHEVAT:                                SEDER HAGADDAH                               The                                third change for Tu B' Shevat came during the                                Zionist movement in Israel. 
  According to                                the Talmud, when one acquires land, the land does                                not change hands - regardless of what is written                                in the deed - until the land has been improved in                                some way.
 
                                 One way                                to improve the land and establish ownership is to                                plant trees. Thus, planting trees became a Tu B'                                Shevat custom, especially for children.                                Unfortunately, years later in the 1960s, the                                Israelis discovered that trees planted in the                                middle winter did not survive. 
  So the                                custom of planting trees on Tu B' Shevat no                                longer exists among Jews or Israelis who                                understand environmental issues.
  The                                present celebration of Tu B' Shevat makes it                                a Jewish Earth Day, a time for Jews to remind                                themselves that the Torah and the Talmud teach us                                to be stewards and caretakers of the Earth.                                
  We are to leave the earth a better place                                than we found it. We have an ethical                                obligation to make sure that our grandchildren and                                great-grandchildren have a planet on which they                                can live with live fruit trees, as                                an ecological example.                                
 
                                  (The                                story of Tu B' Shevat continues below  with the                                holiday's spiritual                                lessons...)
      |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               |                                 My                                New Year's Resolution for                                You
   In                                my years of Rabbinic Counseling I've noticed that                                many modern Jews are not as familiar with the                                Torah and the Talmud as they might be.
  They                                find it difficult to understand and interpret in a                                way that makes sense and has relevance to their                                lives in the modern world.                                
  The                                spiritual disconnection that this causes inspired                                me to write a second book, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and                                Talmud.
   This book instills Jewish values and an                                understanding of the Torah and Talmud's teachings                                in plain English and from a modern point of view.                                
  The                                Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our                                fellow man and that we are to ''go and study.''                                The rest is commentary.                                
  A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud                                clarifies the commentary and allows one to study                                the Torah and the Talmud to learn the Judaic                                ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and                                peace.
  This year, I resolve to help you                                understand the Torah and Talmud in a way that you                                never thought you could.
  Care to take me up                                on that?
  A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud is only $24.99 (plus                                S&H) when you purchase your copy from my online bookstore.                                
  That's a $5.00 savings from the Amazon                                price, and certainly                                a small amount to pay for the priceless wisdom                                contained within the Torah and the                                Talmud.
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  |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               The                                Spiritual Lesson of Tu B'                                Shevat
                                 Tu B' Shevat also contains a                                spiritual lesson:
  What does this Torah                                verse mean?                                                                 "A person is like a tree of the field."                                 (Deut. 20:19)                                
   Rabbi Yisrale of Chortkov                                explains:
                                 "When fortune has turned for someone, and                                they have lost all hope and are despairing, then                                they should ponder a tree in winter. Its leaves                                have fallen, its moisture has dried up, it is                                almost a dead stump in the ground. Then suddenly,                                it begins to revive and to draw moisture from the                                earth. Slowly it blossoms, then brings forth                                fruits. People should learn from this not to                                despair, but to take hope and have courage, for                                they, too, are like a tree" 
   As already mentioned, Tu B' Shevat is                                the New Year for Trees, and is one of four Jewish                                new years. It is a celebration of trees' rebirth                                in the midst of winter. This is the Kabbalistic                                reawakening of divine energy with G!d as the tree                                of life. 
  Tu B' Shevat                                is the first Earth Day. The Talmud declares:                                
                                 "If                                you have a sapling, and someone says that  the                                Messiah has come, complete the planting,  and                                then go welcome the Messiah."                                
                                 (Avot                                d'Rabbi                            Natan)
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