The
Four Jewish New Years Specified In Mishnah Rosh Hashanah 1:1 Are
1 Tishri, 15 Shevat , 1 Nisan, And 1 Elul .
1
Tishrei
The
first of Tishrei serves as the New Year for several purposes, the
best known being the New Year for the civil calendar, or “the new year for
seasons.” Rosh Hashanah literally means “the head of the year.” Jewish years
are traditionally figured from creation (for example, this year is considered
the 5763rd year from creation), with the New Year beginning on 1 Tishrei.
Although Rosh Hashanah is not a well-defined holiday in the Torah,
distinguished mostly as “a day when the horn is sounded” (Numbers
29:1), the Talmud expanded its religious connotations
to make it the Jewish New Year and the anniversary of creation. Rosh
Hashanah 8a explains, “For R. Zeira said
[that Tishrei is considered the New Year for years in relation] to the seasons.
And this [opinion of R. Zeira] is [in consonance with the view of] R. Eliezer,
who said that the world was created in Tishrei.” In fact, the rabbis focused
particularly on the creation of human beings, without whose perceptive ability
the physical creation would go unappreciated.
As
the beginning of the civil calendar, 1 Tishrei is also considered the new year
for measuring the reigns of foreign kings, necessary because legal documents
were dated by the current year of a monarch’s reign. Rather than measuring a
king’s reign from the date he took office, 1 Tishrei served as a standard
anniversary marking the end of a full year of rule, even if that “year” had
only been part of a year.
The
new year for setting the Sabbatical year, during which land may not be
cultivated, is also 1 Tishrei. The command for observing a Sabbatical year
appears in Leviticus
25:2-5, “When you enter the land that I assign to you, the land
shall observe a sabbath of the Lord. Six years you may sow your field and six
years you may prune your vineyard and gather in the yield. But in the seventh
year the land shall have a sabbath of complete rest, a sabbath of the Lord: you
shall not sow your field or prune your vineyard…it shall be a year of complete
rest for the land.” Plowing and planting were forbidden from 1 Tishrei of the
seventh year in the Sabbatical cycle, and people were allowed to gather only
what the land could produce on its own, without cultivation.
Similarly,
1 Tishrei is the new year for setting the Jubilee year, the fiftieth year
following seven cycles of Sabbatical years. Sowing was also forbidden during
the Jubilee, but, in addition, all indentured Israelites were allowed to return
to their homes and all tenured land was to be returned to its original owners.
The laws of the Jubilee required that all land sales in Palestine be considered
leases, with land costs computed in terms of the number of crop years remaining
until the next Jubilee, which would begin on 1 Tishri.
1
Tishrei is also the new year for figuring the yearly tithe (ma’aser), or
ten percent tax, on vegetables and grains. The Levites and priests were
supported by these tithes, because they did not own land. The tithe for a
particular year had to be paid with produce from the same year, thus requiring
a standard date to begin and end each fiscal year. Tithing involved three
steps: (1) The owner separated out the first tithe, or ma’aser rishon,
and paid it to the Levites. (2) The Levites then separated out one tenth,
called terumah, for the priests. (3) After separating out the first
tithe, the owner had to put aside a second tithe, or ma’aser sheni,
from the remainder of his produce. In the first, second, fourth, and fifth
years of the sabbatical cycle, the owner was required either to consume this
tithe in Jerusalem or sell it and purchase food to be eaten in Jerusalem. In
the third and sixth years, the owner distributed this second tithe to the poor
as a ma’aser ani, tithe of the poor.
15
Shevat
The
second new year is 15 Shevat, the New Year for trees. Most Jewish sources
consider 15 Shevat as the New Year both for designating fruits as orlah (that
is, forbidden to eat, because they have grown during the first three years
after a tree’s planting) and for separating fruits for tithing. (Some sources,
however, consider 1 Tishrei to be the new year for orlah and 15 Shevat for
tithing.) This date was selected “because most of the winter rains are
over” (Rosh
Hashanah 14a), the sap has begun to rise, and
the fruit has started to ripen. Fruits that have just begun to ripen–from the
blossoming stage up to one third of full growth–are attributed to the previous
year, whereas fruits that are more mature on 15 Shevat apply to the upcoming
year. As with vegetables and grains, fruits that budded during one “fiscal
year” could not be used as tithes on those that budded in another year.
The
15th of Shevat has become a minor holiday, Tu Bishevat. On this day, it is
customary to eat, for the first time, a fruit from the new season, particularly
one typical of the Land of Israel, and to say the Shehecheyanu blessing.
In Ashkenazi communities in Europe, it was customary to eat 15
different kinds of fruits. The Sephardic mystics of Safed in the 16th
century expanded the Tu Bishevat observance with a seder that uses
the symbolism of fruit with and without shells to enact the process of opening
up to God’s holiness. In modern Israel, Tu Bishevat has come to symbolize the
redemption of the land and the awakening of environmental awareness through the
planting of trees.
1
Nisan
The
third Jewish new year is 1 Nisan, which corresponds to the season of the
redemption from Egypt and the birth of the Israelite nation. This
particularistic national event defines the nature of the New Year celebrated on
1 Nisan. The Torah’s command that “this month [Nisan] is for you the beginning
of the months, it shall be the first month of the year to you” tied all
counting of Jewish religious festivals to the Exodus from
Egypt, and this special religious counting system distinguished Israel from
other nations.
The
first of Nisan is also the New Year for the reigns of Jewish kings (in line
with the national emphasis of the season), the renting of houses, and the
counting involved in the prohibition against delaying the fulfillment of vows.
When a person vows to dedicate an object to the Sanctuary, he must fulfill the
vow before three festivals, beginning with Passover, have passed. 1 Nisan is
also the due date for using the half-shekel contribution described on Shabbat
Shekalim to purchase communal sacrifices for the Temple.
1
Elul
The
last new year, 1 Elul, is the New Year for the tithing of cattle. The tithe for
cattle had to be made from cattle born in the same fiscal year, between 1 Elul
one year and the next.
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