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Tu B'Shevat 5768 - January 22, 2008

Jewish Holidays
Tu BiShvat in a Minute
When’s the last time you wished a tree Happy New Year? The 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shevat is a great opportunity. It’s known as Tu BiShvat, the New Year for Trees.
Branches (or: People Are Not Cars)

Some folks think of people much as we think of cars on a highway: each with its own origin and destination, relating to one other only to negotiate lane changes and left-hand turns. But people are not cars.
A Tree's New Year Resolution

Did I grow towards the sun, reaching up higher and higher towards that which I can never grasp, but which nurtures me all the same the more I strive towards it?
The Seven Species and Seven Attributes

Seven areas of our lives represented by the "Seven Kinds": our humanity (wheat), passion (barley), joy (grapes), intimacy (figs), action (pomegranates), struggle (olives) and tranquility (dates)
Spirituality
Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People?

Please don't tell me "We can't understand G‑d's ways." I am sick of hearing that. I want an explanation
Is It Really the Torah, Or Is It Just the Rabbis?

We claim to believe in the Bible, but it seems to me that in reality we're controlled by a small group of old men and their Talmud...
The Joy of a Mitzvah

The two brothers, the famed Rabbi Elimelech of Lizensk and Rabbi Zushe of Anipoli, often wandered about together, posing as simple beggars . . .
Parshah
The Parshah in a Nutshell
The Israelites camp opposite Mount Sinai, and declare their willingness to perform G-d’s will. G-d proclaims the Ten Commandments, but His voice is too intense for the Israelites, and they beg Moses to be their intermediary.
Wanted: Self-Centered, Short-Sighted, Childish People

To the child, "yesterday" is code word for "completely irrelevant past," and "tomorrow" is code word for "utterly irrelevant future."
Ladies First

Commonly perceived as a concession to the weaker gender by the stronger, the rule is actually founded upon a very different rationale
The Spark of All Truths

“And [Moses] was there [on Mount Sinai] with G‑d forty days and forty nights; bread he did not eat and water he did not drink” (Exodus 34:28). Very interesting. Have you ever tried it?
Torah Business Inc.

Even while he sits at the supper table, a careful look at the businessman’s expression, at the thoughtfulness in his eyes, reveals that the affairs of his business are very much on his mind . . .
Understatement

“Who took you out of Egypt”? Talk about sweating the small details! What about “who created heaven and earth”? Surely stage-managing the Exodus doesn’t even approach His role as designer and creator of the universe!
Shabbat's Dual Nature

The different nuances in the Torah's repletion of the Ten Commandments bespeak Shabbat's dual purpose
The Breakthrough

Our Sages tell us that the Torah was studied and observed by our ancestors for hundreds of years before the revelation at Sinai. So why do we celebrate that event as the "Giving of the Torah"? What actually happened at Sinai?
The Jewish Woman
The Power of Once

I would never experience what I had been hearing about from other women – the excitement, anticipation and spiritual renewal. So what, I asked myself, was the point?
Falling Down on the Job

I am one of those super-responsible Type A personalities, the kind whose first words as a baby were “Don’t worry. I’ll take care of it.” I have been doing a pretty good job since then, right up until the moment I broke my leg..
Manna From Heaven

A Tu B'Shevat poem
It is a special kindness that G-d made man to walk upright, so that he looks upon the Heavens; unlike beasts that go on all fours and see only the earth
— Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch (1789-1866)
Print Magazine

Emunah (eh-moo-na): A knowing, deep in the soul, that there is only one G-d, that He is good, and that He loves you unconditionally.

Simchah (sim-kha): A mighty current of life-energy felt when contemplating emunah.

Bitachon (bi-ta-khon): A surge of invincible confidence that emerges when emunah is challenged by circums...

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