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Ever since the first breath of creation, time has unfolded
in cycles of seven. Six days reach their crescendo in the seventh day, Shabbat
- the Sabbath, the day of rest. Six years reach their crescendo in the seventh
year, Shemittah - the sabbatical, the year of renewal. Seven cycles of seven
years reach their crescendo in the Jubilee year, the ultimate enactment of
re-creation.
All three call forth nostalgic images of Eden, when humanity
lived in abundance, peace, equity and ease.
All offer a way of partial return. But there are differences among them:
Jubilee is more fantasy than experience, more vision than practice. And while
it remains part of our sacred narrative, it has nonetheless fallen out of our sacred
calendar.
Shabbat, on the other hand, is a constant presence. It is
celebrated weekly, as time apart, 25-hours of a lived dream dimension. We enter
Shabbat by leaving the work-a-day world and cross into a domain that is edenic,
“a taste of the world to come.” We are
at leisure, eat well, avoid strife and pretend to create one world, diminishing
the boundaries that daily divide us.
Shemittah sits between these two. Neither a fantasy nor a
constant presence, it is both a vision of a new reality and a practice to be
lived in here-and-now. It happens in the same time and space as all other
years, only we are to live this year differently, more equitably, more fully,
more intentionally than the six years before. It is a year of harmony and celebration
with the earth, when the land of Israel rests from the agricultural labors
imposed upon her yet when she yields sufficient goodness for us all to thrive.
It is a year of commonplace manna, when food is ours for the taking, but modestly,
temperately, with a deep sense of gratitude and awareness; when debts are
forgiven and there is equity for all; when property boundaries are suspended
and all becomes once again part of the Commons. It is, in short, a year of
rebooting, recalibration and realigning our assumptions about property, land
use, economic justice and social equity. Not as a dream but as a reality.
Rosh Hashanah 2014 marks the next shemittah year (the Hebrew
year 5775). Jews around the world are
seeking ways to enter into the laws and spirit of this sabbatical year as they
have never done before. They are extending its message beyond the boundaries of
Israel to wherever they live; and extending the thrust of its ethic beyond the
agricultural sector. To mark this moment, to help us begin this historic revisioning,
renewal and re-imagining of the ways to live a year of shemittah, we offer this
Rosh Hashanah seder. It is modeled on the Jewish tradition of new year’s simanim, symbolic food, like the traditional apples dipped in
honey, that represent the blessings we hope will be ours.
The seder consists of six small cups or bowls arrayed on a
decorative base plate.
This base plate represents the whole, the sweep of time, the
sphere that encompasses and defines every 7-year cycle. For shemittah is not
just one segregated year, as Shabbat is not one segregated day. It is the year
that frames and gives shape to all the other years, both those just past, and
those yet to come. Upon this foundation plate rest the six cups or bowls.
Together they represent the six attributes that define the essence of the
shemittah year, and a life lived in goodness, sacred striving and delight.
Slices of apples (and other perennial delicacies of your
choice) are arrayed in the center of the base plate. These recall the fruits of
Eden that sustained us, and the Tree of Knowledge that launched us on the
irresistible human enterprise of curiosity, desire, exploration and pursuits.
And it represents the perennial foods (fruits, nuts and berries) that grow on
their own during the shemittah year and that we gratefully eat at a time when
we do not plow, sow, reap or commercially harvest the produce of the field.
On this base plate set the following:
Cup One: Honey
representing Sova – Enoughness. Sova
is the feeling of fullness without being stuffed; of contentment through what
was given and not wanting anything more; of maximum satisfaction with minimum
consumption and disruption. This first cup is filled with honey. Pass around
the cup for all to dip the apples in the honey, say:
“In this year of shemittah, may we
know no hunger, either spiritual or physical. May we be as readily sated with
the delights of life as this cup is filled by these drops of honey.”
Cup Two: Wine (consider
fruit wine, including Passion Fruit Wine from Israel or homemade date wine)*
signifying Hodayah – Gratefulness.
Hodayah is the feeling of gratitude, of deep satisfaction and elusive peace
with what we have received. Wine is the age-old symbol of celebration, an
expression of shared gratitude. It takes years for the vineyard to grow and
produce grapes and time enough for the wine to ferment. On the human side, this
requires steadfastness, peace, stability, and longevity; on nature’s side cool
and heat and sun and rain and rich soil all in the right amounts - surely
things to be grateful for. This cup is filled to the rim with the wine. (Wine
cups at everyone’s place may be filled with this too.) Hold it up and say:
“In this shemittah year, may we
know peace and be strangers to disappointment and disruption. May the earth
find renewal amid its rest. And may gratitude fill us all as the wine fills
this cup.”
Cup Three: Figs
representing Revaya – Abundance. Revaya
is the awareness of the vast resources of a healthy world, the earth’s ancient
capacity of growth and self-renewal, and our call to keep it going. Figs are
not like most other fruit crops. The fruits on one tree do not ripen all at
once but one by one, each in its own time. They offer abundance without
surfeit. This cup is filled with figs (either whole or cut, fresh if available
though dried figs are fine too), speckled and spangled with seeds. Pass around
the cup for all to take from it and say:
“In this year of shemittah, may we
recognize abundance and know no waste. May we celebrate the vast goodness that
lies within even the most modest cache of life; may we reverently receive
life’s abundance and, like the continuous fruiting of the fig tree, give what
we can, at the time that is right.”
Cup Four: Raisins
representing Hesed – Goodness, Kindness, Generosity. Hesed is a response to our gratitude for the varieties of gifts we
have received in this world. Having received we are moved to give. Such is the
nature of the gift. The raisins heaped in this cup signify the sweet,
satisfying substance that can be given even after other extractions of goodness
have been taken. They recall the leaves, the juices, the wine, the vinegar, the
shade, the wood and delight that are all gifts of the grape. In response to all
that we have been given, we are moved to give more. Pass around the cup for all
to take from and say:
“In this shemittah year, may we
know no greed. May we recognize the gifts we have received and in return
realize the manifold ways of giving that lie within each of us.”
Cup Five: Pomegranate
representing Poriyut - Fertility. Poriyut is the creativity, the dynamism,
the fecundity that characterizes the majesty of nature. It is what allows us to
eat during this year of fallowness and renewal. It is the dormancy that bursts
forth, in the right conditions, inspiring the human gifts of imagination,
discovery and awe. This cup is filled with pomegranate seeds, symbols of
overflowing fertility. Pass the cup around for everyone to taste and say:
“In this shemittah year, may we
know no barrenness, no emptiness. May this year of material enoughness bring
forth overflowing acts of discovery, delight and spiritual bounty.”
Cup Six: Dates
representing Otzar - The Commons. Otzar
is earth’s shared resources, owned by none and gifted to all. It is the
storehouse of the ages, the fundamentals of life that we all depend upon. It is
the stuff of earth and society, natural and cultural, that we share now in our
lifetimes and leave behind for others. Our stories, our knowledge, our goods,
our homes, our earth. This cup holds stuffed dates, signifying all that we
share in the giving to and taking from the Commons. (Another option: put a few
symbolic dates in the center cup but in addition, array dates - pitted and
sliced - on the outer edge of a serving plate, surrounding a center mound of
stuffing: chopped almonds, walnuts, pistachios or pine nuts that have been soaked
in honey and wine. Let everyone fill a date with the sweet filling and give it
to someone else at the table.) Everyone takes a date and says:
“In this shemittah year, may we
know no isolation, no loneliness, no selfishness. May we recognize that we are
joined in partnership to the earth, and to one another through our common
heritage, the Torah, our past and our future that bind us to one another
forever, throughout the cycles of space and time.”
Then wash it all down with a drink of l’chaim.
Note: This multi-layered seder is a tradition that can be
adapted to mark every year of the shemittah cycle. On Rosh Hashanah of the
shemittah year (the seventh culminating year), all the cups are filled,
celebrating the completion of one shemittah cycle. The following year, the
first year, only the first cup with the
honey – and the apples – appear on the plate. The second year, the first
two cups; the third year, the first three, and so on til the completion of the
cycle and the celebration of the next shemittah year.
Biblical shemittah texts:
Exodus 23:10-11
Leviticus 25:1-7
Leviticus 25:20-22
Deuteronomy 15:1-6
* Only wine that includes grapes qualifies for the Kiddush
blessing: borei pri hagafen, who
creates the fruit of the vine. “Shehakol nihiyah bed'varo” is said over
fruit wines without a grape base. If the blessing over wine
(Kiddush) and bread (Hamotzi) have already been said at the
beginning of the meal, no additional blessings need to be recited over the
foods of the seder plate.
This seder is meant to be a template to be used and adapted as celebrants desire. Please do share any adaptations, improvements, suggestions, etc with me. Nina Beth Cardin, ncardin@comcast.net.
Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin is the co-founder of the Sova Project
and the founder and director of the Baltimore Jewish Environmental Network, an
organization dedicated to greening her local Jewish community; the founder and
director of the Baltimore Orchard Project, an organization that grows, gleans
and gives away urban fruit; and a co-founder and chair of the Interfaith
Partners for the Chesapeake, an interfaith organization that works on behalf of
the health of the Chesapeake Bay watershed and all its inhabitants.
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