Tu B'shevat: A Time of Hope

January 29, 2025

Tu B'shevat: A Time of Hope

By JF&CS Community Chaplain, Rabbi Beiner

Tu B’shevat or the "New Year of the Trees" is Jewish Arbor Day. The holiday is observed on the 15th (tu) of the Hebrew month of Shevat. This year, the holiday begins on the evening of February 12. Scholars believe that originally Tu B’shevat was an agricultural festival, marking the emergence of spring. In the 17th century, Kabbalists created a ritual for Tu B’shevat akin to a Passover seder. Today, it has become a common practice to hold a Tu B’shevat seder each year, with many creative versions being used. This holiday also has become a tree-planting festival in Israel, in which Israelis and Jews around the world plant trees in honor or in memory of loved ones and friends.

The theme most commonly associated with the holiday is the environment, which includes our sacred obligation to care for the world and our responsibility to share the fruits of the earth with everyone. Additionally, Tu B’shevat is a festival of nature, full of wonder, joy and thankfulness for creation in anticipation of the renewal of the upcoming spring.

Tu B’shevat​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ falls at the beginning of spring in Israel, when the winter rains subside and the pink and white blossoms of the almond trees begin to bud. For this reason, almonds and other fruits and nuts native to the Land of Israel – barley, dates, figs, grapes, pomegranates, olives, and wheat – are commonly eaten on the holiday, particularly during a Tu B’shevat seder.

For those of us living outside the land of Israel, particularly in places where winter is harsh, dark and cold, Tu B’shevat arrives with a dose of unreality. It’s hard to welcome the ‘harbinger of spring’, when we are huddled by the fireplace drinking hot tea. And yet we know, every year, that no matter how long or arduous the winter is, spring will eventually come. Tu B’shevat reminds us of that inevitability in the universe; that we can rely on the cycles of nature. Spring (and summer) will come.

Each year that passes comes with difficult and dark times. Within our families and communities, our country, in Israel and around the world, we have trouble and strife with people experiencing pain and suffering. And yet we know that ‘life goes on’, things will change for the better, the seasons will inevitably turn, and winter will give way to spring.

Tu’ B’shevat heralds the annual rebirth of the natural world and is deeply symbolic of our own resilience and hopes for brighter and better times. A message for Tu B'shevat is to not let the dark times in our lives define us. Just as the moon waxes and wanes, we too live according to cycles in which our lives move from challenge to success, from darkness to light. As we celebrate the holiday, may we affirm our connections with the natural world, eagerly anticipating the coming of spring and a renewal of goodness and light in our lives.