The Sefer Yetzira, among other texts, reveals a
constellation of unique energies, themes and spiritual practices for each month
of the year. We will build on these teachings in order to discover some of the
deeper meanings of the month of Shevat, and its special day, Tu b’Shevat. This
will allow us to unleash the transformative powers of these times.
The Letter-Combination of the Month
...each month of the year has an inner
light that shines...
There are four letters in the Divine Name Havaya
(Yud, Hei, Vav, and Hei) and each month of the year has an inner
light that shines as a different sequence of these four letters. The month of
Shevat shines as the combination Hei*Yud*Vav*Hei. It’s interesting to
note that the only difference between this combination and the original spelling
of the Divine Name is that the sequence of the first two letters is reversed.
There are two parts of the month of Shevat. The first
part, from the First of Shevat until the eve of the Fifteenth (Tu b’Shevat), is
considered ‘harsh’ (din). This is because the natural flow of the first
part of the Divine Name is reversed in this month’s letter-combination: Hei
then Yud. The second part of Shevat is much less harsh, and contains more
kindness (chesed). This is because the second part of the
letter-combination is in the natural flow of the Divine Name: Vav then
Hei.
The second part of the month begins with Tu b’Shevat.
As the fifteenth day, Tu b’Shevat is the fulcrum between the two sides, the
Hei-Yud, and the Vav-Hei. As a fulcrum contains the qualities of both
sides, so the day of Tu b’Shevat includes the four letters of the Name. Tu
means 15, and this is the numerical value of Hei-Yud (or Yud-Hei).
Shevat is the eleventh month of the year (counting from Nissan), and 11 is the
numerical value of Vav-Hei.
Tu b’Shevat is thus the shifting point where din
is diminished and the proper flow of chesed is restored. How can we
activate this shift in our own lives?
The Torah Verse Connected with Shevat
The letter-combination of the month is found in Lev.: "Hamar Yamirenu V’haya Hu." (27:33) This
verse says that when selecting an animal for a Temple sacrifice, if a person
wanted to exchange the designated animal for different one, both animals would
then be considered holy. The theme, therefore, is expanding Kedusha --
holiness. In Shevat, we expand holiness in the realm of eating.
The real pleasure of eating comes...from the spiritual "word of G-d" within the food...
The real pleasure of eating comes not from the
physicality of the food, but from the spiritual "word of G-d" within the food,
as it is written, "for not on the bread alone will man live, rather from the
word of G-d." (Deut. 8:3) What if we could taste the spiritual reality
within the physicality of the food itself? Then the "word of G-d" and its
"exchange", or the physicality, would both be holy, and we would have expanded
holiness into the realm of physical pleasure.
Major Events in Shevat
On the first day of Shevat, Moses had the Torah
translated into the seventy languages of the world. His intention was to expand
the boundary of holiness, to include even the mundane world in the light of
Torah wisdom.
The Letter of the Month
The alphabetical letter corresponding to Shevat is
Tzadi, also called Tzadik. The Torah says that for the tzadik,
the righteous or enlightened person, eating is inherently satisfying: "The
tzadik eats for the satisfaction of the body; the belly of the wicked feels
always empty." (Prov. 13:25)
The tzadik eats for the purpose of nourishment
of the body. Although this person’s food choices may tend to be more nourishing
and healthy than those of the unenlightened person, it is primarily the
purposefulness of his eating that brings satisfaction. His eating is spiritual,
really satisfying his soul as well as his body. An unenlightened person may eat
the same amount of the same food as the tzadik, yet since he eats for no
deeper purpose, he only exacerbates his physical and spiritual hunger.
The Name of the Month
The word Shevat (Shin-Beit-Tet) is related to
the word Shabbos (Shin Beit Taf, also pronounced ‘Shabbat’).
In fact, in the Acadian language (Assyrian-Babylonian), the name for the
eleventh month of the year is Shabatu. Since the two letters Tet and
Taf are both lingual consonants, they are considered interchangeable.
On the day of Shabbos, most people can enjoy
eating in holiness. The Arizal says that on Shabbos there is no waste,
for everything can be elevated. A Talmid Chacham, a wise student of
Torah, is called ‘Shabbos'. (Zohar III, 29a) Therefore a tzadik,
or a wise person who embodies the spirit of Shabbos, can eat in holiness
on every day of the week.
Sense of the Month
According to the Sefer Yetzirah, the sense
connected with Shevat is 'Le’itah', taste. "Tamu ure’u ki tov Hashem,"
‘Taste and see that G-d is good.’ (Ps. 34:9) Reb Elimelech of Lizhensk
interprets this verse: ‘Taste and see that all goodness is in fact G-d.’ In this
state of consciousness, the pleasant tastes of food are no longer mundane, they
are holy in themselves.
Eating ‘for the sake of Heaven’, for the purpose of
strengthening yourself for contemplative prayer or study, is a very high
practice. Yet, it is still only a means to an end. Reb Elimelech suggests that
it’s higher to taste the presence of G-d within the food itself. This is also
the implication of the verse, "B’chol derachecha de’eihu/In all your
ways know G-d." (Prov. 3:6) The Baal Shem Tov teaches that in the act of eating
you can create Yechudim/unifications between the physical and the
spiritual. (See for example Toldos Yaakov Yosef, Parashat Va’eira,
p.141)
Tribe of the Month
Asher is the tribe corresponding to Shevat. The
letters of the name Asher (Alef-Shin-Reish) can be reversed to form the
acronym for Rosh Shenot Ilanot, or ‘the Rosh Hashanah of the Trees’, an
epithet of Tu b’Shevat. (Ma’or vaShemesh, "Rimzei Tu b’Shevat")
What does Asher represent? The Torah says, (Gen.
49:20) "As for Asher, fat (rich, delicious) is his produce." Reb
Tzadok haCohen of Lublin interprets this to mean that the concept of Asher is
connected with the enjoyment of food. (Pri Tzadik, 2:19)
Delicious foods such as fruits represent affluence...
The name Asher shares its root with the word 'Osher/affluence’.
Delicious foods such as fruits represent affluence since they are not usually
considered staples, as are bread and water. On Tu b’Shevat our custom is to taste
a royal array of exotic and delicious fruits.
Other related words, Ashur and Ashrei
allude to the exalted sefira of Keter. In the non-dual realm of
Keter, everything is equal, and yet this is the paradoxically the place
where 'Ta'anug/delight’, is rooted. We learn from this that the
foundation of ‘holy delight’ is equanimity. When all tastes are equal to us,
then we can delight in the earth’s abundance without being harmed. Rabbi Yehudah
haNassi lived on this level. Although his home was full of the richest foods and
delicacies, at the end of his life he proclaimed, "I did not partake in the
pleasures of this world, not even by the measure of a small finger."
Along these lines, the Ma’or vaShemesh comments
on the verse: "From all the fruit you shall eat, just not from the Tree of
Good and Evil." (Gen. 2:16-17) ‘This means,, you may eat freely from every
tree, but don’t make distinctions between the fruits. They should all feel and
taste the same to you.’ (Ma’or vaShemesh, Parashat Bo, pp. 179-180)
Body Part of the Month
According to some readings, the body part of Shevat is
the Kurkavan, the gizzard (in fowl, corresponding to the 3rd stomach in a ruminant). The Talmud (Berachot 61b) says, "The
Kurkavan grinds the food." Why does the Talmud focus on the inner processor,
the gizzard, rather than on the more obvious "grinders", the teeth? The month of
Shevat helps us rectify the inner processing of food, the deeper issues of
eating.
One way that Shevat helps us is by allowing us to
explore the spiritual effects of a physically empty stomach (the human equivalent of a gizzard). All of the weeks of
Shevat are part of a period called Shuvavim Tat, eight weeks in which
fasting is frequently prescribed. When we temporarily refrain from physical
food, we can become more aware of our relationship to eating. Are we in the
habit of eating for the sake of its outer pleasures? Do we depend on food for
physical and emotional comfort? When we return to eating, can we focus on the
deeper, spiritual realities within our food? This is the message of Shevat: if
we can eat in mindfulness and holiness, we can diminish the din in our lives and
restore the flow of chesed.
Time of the Year
When the weather is hot, people tend to eat less, and
people generally lose weight in the summer. In the winter months, people tend to
enjoy food more. However, when it is very cold, it is harder to enjoy food.
Tevet is the coldest month of the year, and in Shevat it starts to get slightly
warmer. The Ma’or vaShemesh writes that during this time of year, people
begin to focus on food again. Because of this increased focus on food, the sages
instituted the Shuvavim Tat, as we mentioned above, as a tikun for
overeating. Tu b’Shevat also became a holiday of eating with intentionality, and
correcting our relationship to food.
New Year of the Trees
Shevat means "rod", meaning that it’s a time of
‘judgment’, an allusion to Rosh Hashanah. Tu b’Shevat is called the Rosh
Hashanah of the (Fruit) Trees. Nevertheless, the actual Judgment Day for trees
seems to occur much earlier in the year, perhaps on Sukkot, or even on Rosh
Hashanah itself. In what sense then, is Tu b’Shevat a new beginning for the
trees, and for us?
...Tu b’Av represents the ‘subconscious’ glimmer of love that lead to
the act of Creation.
Tu b’Shevat is mystically parallel to Tu b’Av, the
Fifteenth day of the Summer month of Av. Tu b’Av is forty days before the
Twenty-fifth of Elul, the date of the beginning of the Creation of the World
(five days prior to Rosh Hashanah). The Talmud, at the end of Tractate Taanit,
suggests that Tu b’Av represents the ‘subconscious’ glimmer of love that lead to
the act of Creation. The Baalei Ha’Tosefot say that on Rosh Hashanah, the
‘thought’ of creating humanity entered the Creator’s consciousness. (Rosh
Hashanah 27) The actual Creation of humanity took place six months later, on
the First of the month of Nissan.
Tu b’Shevat is forty days before the Twenty-fifth of
Adar. According to the Baalei Ha’Tosefot, the Twenty-fifth of Adar would
be the first day of Creation of the world, as it is five days before the First
of Nissan. Tu b’Shevat would thus be the first glimmer of love before the act of
Creation. According to Jewish Law, it is the day that new sap begins to stir and
flow within the fruit trees of the Land of Israel. It is the first glimmer of
the new fruits that will blossom in Nissan. It is the first glimmer of the
chesed that will nourish us in the coming year.
[From //IYYUN.com]