Tu B’Shvat Thoughts: Bringing Mysticism Back – New Voices

When Tu Bshvat comes around, I roll up my sleeves and prepare myself for the ritual tree planting, garden weeding, and litter collecting that has marked my Tu Bshvats of the past. My less observant, modern Jewish community taught me the holidays message of social justice in concrete terms: We plant trees, trees grow, trees make the world a better place.

Far from what I learned in Hebrew school, I found solace in these spiritual explanations, inspiring me to want to push my less observant Jewish community to embrace more mystical interpretations of Jewish ritual to retain our connection to other spiritual communities in an empowering, uniquely Jewish way.

For me, there was a disconnect between the spiritual understanding of Tu Bshvat and my concrete understanding of the holiday, built on the rationalist and humanist values of my modern Jewish community. In contrast, the Hazon Haggadah begins with a coy nod to the wonder built into all Jewish ritual. It quotes Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (zl) saying, There is neither worship or ritual without a sense of mystery. This acknowledgment of uncertainty and wonder stands in contradiction to the more material descriptions of Tu Bshvat to which I was accustomed.

While willing to focus on ideas of community and social justice, my community is nervous to discuss the less tangible and more spiritual elements of Judaism like G-d and mysticism. For this materially-rooted community, its more comfortable to teach children concrete actions like planting a tree than it is to encourage them to explore more uncertain aspects of Tu Bshvat. However, this trepidation to address the unknown left me and likely other Jewish millennials with a spiritual craving that feels undernourished by my Jewish communitys rational approach.

I understand that this philosophy didnt emerge in a vacuum. My communitys lean towards the rational, as opposed to the spiritual, is a product of the Haskalah (enlightenment) in 19th century Europe. The Haskalah movement wanted to deemphasize the authority of kabbalah and later Hasidism by infusing Judaism with a rational, humanistic perspective. Ultimately, my Jewish communitys desire to center Tu Bshvat around universal values like environmentalism is a product of the Haskalahs reforms.

My community needs to realize embracing Jewish mysticism doesnt mean sacrificing universalism.We do not need to shun our own spiritual tradition in order to fit into our broader society or feel entwined in a global community. Religious mysticism exists in many faiths, and we should recognize how our mystical practices connect us to a diversity of spiritual communities.

Plus, rationalism has its dangers. Often Western societal elites heralded the push towards rational modernism in order to better control the population of the countries they headed. For example, prior to the 1910 revolution in Mexico, the elites of the country pushed for the population to adopt modern ideas that would show an allegiance to the United Statess system of thought. Meanwhile, missionaries during the colonization of Africa often stamped out the local populations spiritual and religious practices in order to organize the people under a Western thought process that the colonizers could control. These missionaries feared that a strong, local spiritual tradition could empower the people to rise against their oppressors. Thus the process of adopting rational, modern belief systems has historically been tied tied to Western imperialism and colonization. By holding on to spiritual practice, we can push against the dominant ideas of Western society and join a community of people who are attempting to retain their communal power through spirituality.

The Hazon Haggadah continues its explanation of the holidays mysticism with a brief history of the spiritual origins of Tu Bshvat. As the story goes, Jewish exiles from Spain found their way to Tzvat and began imbuing Tu Bshvat with its mystical qualities.

As I look to my own Jewish community and feel frustrated with its disconnect from the spiritual elements of our tradition, this story stands as a reminder that, in all times in Jewish history, groups of people have needed to invigorate Jewish practice with renewed spirituality. The fact that Hazon, a non-Orthodox organization, put out such a spiritually imbued Tu BShvat haggadah is a good sign that the less observant Jewish community is beginning to embrace mysticism once again. As we look out on the trees we planted last week and and remember the delicious taste of the seven species, I hope that we can all plant seeds of wonder, mystery, and mysticism in our growing understanding of our rich spiritual tradition.

Hannah Weintraub is a senior at the University of Pittsburgh, majoring in History and Fiction Writing with a minor in Jewish Studies.

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