"On the night of the full moon of the #Hebrew month of #Shevat, we mark #TuBishvat, a minor festival on the #Jewish calendar yet one that carries a Jewish story no less profound than that of far greater #holidays.

Tu Bishvat expresses the deep bond between human beings and the land, between spirit and matter, between past and future. It reminds us that #Jewishidentity has never been detached from the earth, from the landscape, or from our responsibility for the world in which we live.

The origins of Tu Bishvat are modest and practical: a tax day for trees, a technical and economic marker in the #agricultural calendar designed to regulate the tithes taken from #fruit-bearing #trees.

Yet even here, a larger idea is already present: The human being is not the owner of nature but rather a partner – responsible, accountable, and committed to community, peoplehood, and land."

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-885187

The origins and development of Tu Bishvat | The Jerusalem Post

In days of local and global upheaval, Tu Bishvat invites us to pause, to look closely, and to remember: the world has been entrusted to us.

The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com

Text: In the synagogue, this passage is read as the Haftarah on the last day of Passover.

📅 Next Reading: April 6, 2026 (Diaspora) / April 5, 2026 (Israel).

But the spiritual preparation begins now, in the month of Shevat (January/February). It’s the season of the "Shoot from the stump of Jesse"—the awakening of new life from old roots.

#Passover #Shevat #JewishCalendar #Haftarah
https://youtu.be/ALx_ocpRAAc?si=ikKF2EjsEBjHVInZ

והיה ביום ההוא - להקת פיקוד דרום

YouTube

#Shevat (also #Shvat) /ʃəˈvat (Hebrew & English)/ = 5th month of the Jewish #CivilYear, and 11th month of the #liturgicalYear. The word is borrowed from an Akkadian word meaning "strike," probably in reference to seasonal heavy rain in that region at that time of year (January-February in the #GregorianCalendar)

Tu B' Shvat = "15 in Shvat" [15th of Shvat], the New Year of the Trees. Also called Rosh Hashanah La'ilanot (= "head-of the-year for-trees", i.e. New Year For Trees) ...

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