HUMANITY'S FIRST EARTH DAY, TU B'SHEVAT
JANUARY 2016 BLUFFTON SUN
RABBI DR ARTHUR   SEGAL
Shalom and greetings:
I wish you a happy, joyous, healthy, peaceful and prosperous   2016.
This year in our Bluffton Sun, instead of touring around the globe,   visiting exotic Jewish communities, as we did in 2015, we will take a tour   around the calendar visiting the Jewish holidays and learning some universal   spiritual lessons from them.
January 25th is Tu   B'Shevat, the 15th of the   Month of Shevat. It is one of the four Jewish new years. This date marks the New   Year for trees. Hebraically this day was to mark the age of the tree, so that   when it reached the start of its 5th year of existence, the fruit belonged to the owner. Prior to that date,   the produce was tithed to the Temple in Jerusalem for charity.   
The holiday has taken different forms of significance over the   years. From a Zionist view point, trees were planted not only to help turn   barren land into fruitful land, but also because in Hebrew tradition, ownership   of land is obtained by improving the land with tree   planting.
It has also taken on an eco-Judaic meaning reminding us that we are   caretakers of the planet, and to leave the Earth in a better state for the next   generation. It was humanity's first Earth Day
From a Jewish Spiritual Renewal view, Tu B'Shevat has much meaning. We   celebrate it with a Kabbalistic Seder, spiritual dinner, utilizing seven species   found in Israel.  They are: wheat, barley, grapes, figs,   pomegranates, olives and dates. We include almonds, as they blossom now in   Israel.
The spiritual lesson is that "a person is like a tree of the field." When   fortune has turned for someone, and they have lost all hope and are   despairing,     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.
Tu B'Shevat celebrates the rebirthing of trees in the midst of   winter, the Kabbalistic reawakening of Divine energy with God as the tree of   life. The idea of having faith and moving forward with hope is a fundamental   Judaic principle that has sustained us for 3300   years.
Rabbi   Arthur Segal is an international lecturer, author, and teacher. Visit him at   www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org   . Email at RabbiASegal@aol.com    .    
www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.com/books   www.FaceBook.com/Arthur.L.Segal   www.FaceBook.com/RabbiArthurSegalJewishSpiritualRenewal   www.RabbiArthurSegal.blogspot.com 
 
REBBETZIN ELLEN SEGAL
www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.com/books www.FaceBook.com/Arthur.L.Segal www.FaceBook.com/RabbiArthurSegalJewishSpiritualRenewal www.RabbiArthurSegal.blogspot.com
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC; Savannah, GA

