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Seder Tu Bishvat- Long Version - ñãø è"å áùáè- âøñä àøåëä
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Resource Type: Source Sheet in: English
Age 15 - 100
Group Size 10 - 100
Estimated Time: 90 minutes
Leader: Welcome to our Seder for TU Bi’Shevat.
Why a Seder for TU Bi’Shevat?
Because a Seder is a ritual that makes an idea tangible. A Seder speaks to spiritual values, and makes an idea concrete. On Pesach, we use horseradish to really taste the bitterness of slavery; we see the haroset and picture the hard labor of our ancestors. Likewise the Seder of TU B’Shevat uses symbols and ideas to teach a theme.
What are the central themes of TU B’Shevat?
A Participant: Long ago in Biblical times our fathers and mothers worked the earth. This closeness to the earth made them aware of the transformation of nature from the long sleep of winter to the rebirth that comes with the end of the winter cycle. The month of Shevat in Eretz Israel brings the promises of the new fruits. During the month of Shevat, the trees begin to blossom. It will be several months yet before the trees will bear their fruits.
A Participant: Why did Hillel declare the New Year for trees to be 15th of Shevat? Our traditions say that the Rabbis who were familiar with the agricultural cycles concluded from their observations that the 15th of Shevat was the approximate date when trees begin to be nourished by the waters of the New Year. This also gave rise to the concept that this day as Rosh Hashanah, is a day of judgment for trees: How much rain will fall on the trees. Kabbalists designated this day as a day of introspection, as on Rosh Hashanah.
A participant:, during the long night of the Diaspora, TU Bi’Shevat came to symbolize the longing of the Jewish people for The Land of Israel, for its fruits, for the good earth.
A Participant: At the end of the 19th century the Jewish people began to return to the land of their forefathers. The early Chalutzim (pioneers) considered the planting of trees to be a Mitzvah or holy work. Planting trees became a symbol of the revival of the land and the nation. They worked hard to drain the swamps and plant the seedlings that would become forests. To this day, planting trees in
TU Bi’Shevat is also the day that the Knesset held its first session. Since then the anniversary of the parliament of the State of Israel is celebrated every year on TU Bi’Shevat.
SEDER
Leader: We begin our Seder by reciting the blessing composed by Rabbi Yossef Hayyim of
“Blessed are you Lo-d our G-d, Majesty of Earth,
You made the world so that nothing lacks in her
"áøåê àúä ä' àìåäéðå îìê äòåìí ùçééðå å÷ééîðå åäâéòðå ìæîï äæä" (àîï)
“Baruch Ata Ad-nai Elokaynu Melech HaOlam Shechechiyanu Vekeeyamanu Vehegeyanu Lazman HaZeh”.
Amen
“Blessed are You, L-rd our G-d, King of the universe, Who has kept us alive, sustained us, and brought us to this season.
Amen
A Participant: The soul of the Seder concerns the “Four Worlds.” The Kabbalists who originated the tradition of TU B’Shevat seder defined four levels of meaning in all physical and spiritual experiences. These they called “worlds.” In this Seder, each world is also connected to a particular element, and an environmental aspect.
These worlds we are invited to explore together tonight are:
Assiyah, the world of Action. It is the world representing Earth, and the barrenness of autumn and winter.
Yetzirah, the world of Formation. It is also the world of emotions, of water and comes to symbolize the promises of spring and rebirth.
Briyah, the world of Creation. It is the world of thought, air, and summer.
Leader:- During the course of this evening we will also be drinking four cups of wine, each representing the colors of the four seasons.
FIRST CUP Kos Ha- Illanot—The cup of the trees. The World of Assiyah
Leader:- In this world, the world of Creation we bless the physical: our bodies , our land, our homes. It is our connection with Earth that inspires action.
The first cup of wine is composed entirely of white wine, symbolizing the barrenness of the fall followed by winter. The sun is weak, the skies are gray. As we drink the fruit of the vine, we recall that nature will be dormant for many months to come, awaiting the cycle of rebirth.
Raise the cup in your right hand and recite together the blessing over the wine.
"áøåê àúä ä' àìåäéðå îìê äòåìí áåøà ôøé äâôï".
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaGafen”.
The first fruits we eat tonight are fruits with inedible peels, which symbolize the physical world of ACTION.
The edible parts of fruit represent holiness.
A participant:- We will be eating fruits that in this season will be flourishing in
Each fruit for the world of Assiyah symbolizes values directing us to manage responsibly our land, as it is said in the Torah:
“And the L-rd G-d took Man and put him in Gan Eden, the garden of Eden to dress it and keep it.”
Bereshit-Genesis:
“And the land shall not be sold in perpetuity for the land is Mine, And you are strangers and settlers with Me.” Vayikra- Leviticus: 25:23
The first fruit is Wheat. Crackers symbolize this fruit here. Wheat represents the good earth and the essential food to sustain us. It is likened to Torah.
Lift up the fruit in your right hand as we recite together the blessing: "áøåê àúä ä' àìåäéðå áåøà îéðé îæåðåú"
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Mine Mezonot”.
The corresponding spiritual world for Assiyah is the world of Din or Accountability. All the fruits we eat here have a tough skin to remind us that we are accountable for the protection of the Earth and the preservation of our environment.
SECOND CUP- Kos ha netiot (the cup for planting trees). The World of Yetzirah
The second cup of wine is 2/3 white and 1/3 red wine, symbolizing the winter and approach of spring. In the white wine symbolizes the cold winter, the red wine signifies the emergence of color. In the sleepy nature there are the first signs of awakening appearing.
Long ago, we believed that before TU’ B’Shevat the trees drank the waters of last year’s falls. On TU B’Shevat the trees began to drink the waters accumulated under ground by the rainfall of this year.
The second cup in devoted to the tradition of planting trees on Tu bi’shvat. This tradition made a big difference in the nature of
.
We now take fruits from the second category. These fruits are edible on the outside, but have inedible pits, symbolizing the Kabalistic world of FORMATION.
The fruits that we are about to eat refer to the “world of Formation”- “Olam Ha Yetsira” These fruits need an external protection because their seeds create new life.
Raise the cup in your right hand and recite together the blessing over the wine. "áøåê àúä ä' àìåäéðå îìê äòåìí áåøà ôøé äâôï"
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaGafen”.
Once again, we eat first from the fruits of
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaAtz.
THIRD CUP- the cup of Israel ’s nature
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaGafen”.
Now we take the fruit form the third category, those fruits that are completely edible, symbolizing the Kabalistic world of CREATION: grapes, figs, carobs, etrogim, apples, strawberries, lemons, raspberries, and pears. The Torah may be compared to the fruits in this category.
Every part of these fruits is good to eat, and every part of the Torah is good to study and learn from.
Once again, we eat first from the fruits of
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaAtz”.
The people of
The Torah is being fabled to a Fig. In all the other fruits there are some scraps- pips, seeds, peeling ets. The fig is beautiful and all it’s parts are eatable, just like the Torah- there is no scrap in it.
We usually take the environment for granted. Why, today, do we focus on conservation?
Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai once said:
"If you have sapling in your hand, ready to plant, and the Messiah comes, plant the tree first and then go to greet him."
The Torah commands us to leave fruit trees standing when we attack a city in wartime. We are also commanded to observe the mitzvah of Peah, so that the poor may glean from the fields.
As we said before- this holiday refers to the environment. It reminds us that we should take care of the environment, the nature, the growing, the living, the Earth. We should keep it in our mind and avoid pollution, and other ways of harming and destroy our planet.
FOURTH CUP- The cup for Zionism and the state of Israel .
The fourth cup of wine is all red, symbolizing the arrival of summer. The sun is shining, the days are hot and the trees are in full bloom and filled with mellow fruits.
This cup is dedicated to peace, to the love for the
Raise the cup in your right hand and recite together the blessing over the wine. "áøåê àúä ä' àìåäéðå îìê äòåìí áåøà ôøé äâôï"
“Baruch Ata Adoni Elohaynu Melech HaOlam Borei Pre HaGafen”.
The fourth Kabalistic world of EMANATION is purely spiritual and cannot be symbolized in any concrete way; therefore it is unrepresented by physical food. The world of Emanation relates to HaShem's love, mercy, wisdom and other essential and omnipresent realities which people perceive with their hearts rather than their five senses.
Tu Bi'Shvat marks the traditional turning point between the rainy season and the beginning of spring.
"ìùðä äáàä áéøåùìéí"
“Next year it
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