The Talmud says that the root is the soul and the branch is the body. Just so, there is a branch of the tree of life representing each and every Jew. How marvelous are these branches, for while nourished by the same roots, the fruit of every branch is completely different. Our rabbis taught that one who sees a multitude of Jews should recite this blessing: “Blessed is the all-wise and mysterious God, for each person’s opinion is different and each person’s appearance is different,” and yet they are all Jews (Talmud Bavli, Berachot 58a). United by the tree of life, the Torah, we each create our own Jewish life.
All too often these days, however, too many of us feel that our active participation in Jewish life and Jewish community does not matter. I am saddened when I hear this phrase: “As long as I feel Jewish, what does it matter if I do anything or not.” I am saddened because it is not enough to “feel” like a branch of the tree of life. Judaism is about doing, and living Jewishly. A feeling is intangible. It cannot be transmitted or passed to another without real, physical contact. The fruit of Jewish life means seeing, tasting, touching, smelling, and acting in order to live as a Jew and to have an impact on the world around us. We are obligated to live Jewishly in order to fulfill the commandments and to sow the seeds of future Jewish living.
Tu Bishevat calls us to action because it asks us to plant. We too are like trees, requiring constant nourishment in order to flourish and grow. While certain aspects of our own trees of life can take nourishment from any ground, there is a second system, a root which reaches hungrily for the teaching of Torah. Being Jewish requires constant rejewvenation from the soil of Torah. We are commanded to take action and participate in doing Jewish life in order to flourish and grow. We have planted and transplanted this tree time and again. May we keep the soil fertile that our faith in God and our Jewish acts may grow. May we strengthen our roots with the past, and may our branches reach towards the future to bear sweet fruit.
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