This article is courtesy of Ohr Somayach!
Tu B'Shevat, the 15th of Shevat, is the New Year for
trees. On this day, it is customary to eat from the seven
species for which the land of Israel is praised: "...a land of
wheat and barley and (grape) vines and fig trees and
pomegranates, a land of olive trees and (date) honey."
(Deuteronomy 8)
Tu B'Shevat is the day when new sap starts to rise in the
tree, when new life is starting to emerge. Even though we
are still in the middle of winter and all looks bleak, cold and
lifeless, Tu B'Shevat comes - a day of new life with the
promise of rejuvenation.
That's why Tu B'Shevat can be compared to the coming
of the Mashiach and the final redemption of mankind.
Everything looks bleak and there seems to be no sign of
life; we are threatened by increasing assimilation and the
loss of Jewish identity; Jewish life seems frozen and
moribund. But even at that very moment, the sap is rising. On the surface, you can see no change whatsoever, but precisely at
that moment, life secretly and inexorably starts to burgeon anew.