Tu Bishvat (15th of Shvat)
Tu
B'Shevat Level: Basic |
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Tu B'Shevat, the 15th day of the Jewish
month of Shevat,
is a holiday also known as the New Year for Trees. The word "Tu" is
not really a word; it is the number 15 in Hebrew, as if you were to call the
Fourth of July "Iv July" (IV being 4 in Roman numerals). See Hebrew Alphabet
for more information about using letters as numbers and why the number 15 is
written this way.
Mentioned in Rosh Hashanah, Judaism has
several different "new years." This is not as strange a concept as it
sounds at first blush; in America, we have the calendar year
(January-December), the school year (September-June), and many businesses have
fiscal years. It's basically the same idea with the various Jewish new years.
Tu B'Shevat is the new year for the purpose
of calculating the age of trees for tithing. See Lev. 19:23-25, which
states that fruit from trees may not be eaten during the first three years; the
fourth year's fruit is for G-d,
and after that, you can eat the fruit. Each tree is considered to have aged one
year as of Tu B'Shevat, so if you planted a tree on Shevat 14, it begins it
second year the next day, but if you plant a tree two days later, on Shevat 16,
it does not reach its second year until the next Tu B'Shevat.
Tu B'Shevat is not mentioned in the Torah. I have found one
reference to it in the Mishnah,
and the only thing said there is that it is the new year for trees, and there
is a dispute as to the proper date for the holiday (Beit Shammai said the
proper day was the first of Shevat; Beit Hillel said the proper day was the
15th of Shevat. As usual, we follow Beit Hillel. For more on Hillel and
Shammai, see Sages and
Scholars).
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