Tree Planting
This act, now
associated with Tu Bishvat, has always been held in high regard in Judaism.
By Lesli Koppelman Ross
Reprinted with permission from Celebrate! The
Complete Jewish Holiday Handbook (Jason
Aronson).
In the Jewish scheme
of the world, trees have always occupied a key and revered role. According to
the Creation story, seed bearing plants and fruit trees were put on the Earth
before any other living thing (Genesis 1:11-12). In other words, the first
thing God did once He had firm land was to plant trees!
The Tree of life,
which God placed at the heart of the Garden of Eden, became a symbol of Jewish
existence, a core value of individual and communal living: continuity.
The Talmud sages held
wonderfully imaginative discussions
about trees in life and legend. They
believed that mankind, which they often compared to trees, owes its existence
to them and should treat them with special recognition. Serious consequences
would result from destroying a tree. The Torah (itself called a Tree of Life in
Proverbs 3:18) prohibits the destruction of fruit trees, even in times of war
(Deuteronomy20:19-20), and to prevent the loss of Israel's natural forests, the
sages prohibited the Jews from allowing goats to graze freely. Today in Israel,
anyone who wants to destroy a tree must apply for a license, even if the tree
is on his or her own property.
Rabbi Yohanan ben
Zakkai, who lived in Jerusalem when
it was being sacked by the Romans, cleverly
taught the priority of planting. "If you should be holding a sapling in
your hand when they tell you the Messiah has arrived," he advised,
"first plant the sapling, then go out and greet him."
Planting a tree--a
concrete, practical act--has represented hope since ancient times. On Tu
Bishvat in Palestine, trees were
planted for children born during the previous year: for a boy, a cedar, with
the wish that the child would grow to be tall and upright, for a girl, a
cypress, which was graceful and fragrant. Later, branches from the cypress and
cedar of a bride and groom were
used to make the huppah (canopy) for their wedding ceremony. The planting was associated with two of the
most important times in an individual's life, birth and marriage, two occasions
when we concentrate on the possibilities for the future. So powerful is this
connection that even in the Theriesenstadt concentration camp, children planted
a tree.
Planting was also
considered a way to create eternity. As the Talmud relates, the righteous man
Horn once encountered a man planting a carob tree. "How long will it take
to bear fruit?" he inquired. "About seventy years," the man
replied. "So you think you will live long enough to taste its
fruits?" The man explained, "I have found ready-grown carob trees in
the world. As my forefathers planted them for me, so I plant for my children."
As a result of the
Jewish National Fund (JNF) reforestation projects in Israel, the land once
desert now supports successful farming endeavors, and millions of trees cover
the hills. Visitors to Israel, on Tu Bishvat or at other times, can participate
in the Plant a Tree with Your Own
Hands Program. A popular alternative is to purchase tree certificates, through
local and national JNF and Hadassah offices.
Each inexpensive
certificate represents one tree planted in Israel in memory or honor of an
individual or on a special occasion. (Only large plantings, not individual
trees, are actually designated on site.)Outside Israel, symbolic
plantings are often done for the holiday, with trees planted in one's yard or
community, or houseplants started from seeds, particularly parsley, which will
sprout in time for Passover.
Lesli Koppelman Ross is a writer and artist whose works
have appeared nationally. She has
devoted much of her time to the causes of Ethiopian Jewry and Jewish education.
Copyright 1994 by Jason
Aronson Inc.