Behar-Bechukotai: The Garden that Needed Shabbat
When Tali becomes personal trainer to a tiny tomato plant, her plan is simple: water it, cheer for it, measure it, sing to it, and help it grow every six seconds. But after Tomato Goldberg Jr. turns into more of a puddle than a plant, Sabba helps Tali, Noam, and Lama ask a surprising Torah question: why does the ground need a Shabbos?
In this episode, kids discover the mitzvah of shmita from Parashat Behar — the seventh year when the land in Eretz Yisrael rests. With a polite hungry goat, a very suspicious llama, and one extremely over-helped garden, we learn that stopping is not doing nothing. Sometimes rest teaches us patience, trust, generosity, and how to let go.
In this episode, kids will discover
- what shmita means
- why the Torah says the land gets a kind of Shabbos
- how shmita follows a six-years-and-one-year rhythm
- why shmita produce is not guarded like private treasure
- how letting the land rest can teach people to share, trust, and stop trying to control everything
Words we hear in this episode
- שְׁמִטָּה / shmita - release, letting go; the seventh year when the land rests
- שַׁבָּת / Shabbos - rest, stopping; the weekly holy day of rest
- שַׁבַּת הָאָרֶץ / Shabbat ha’aretz - the land’s Shabbos/rest
- אֶרֶץ / eretz - land; here, the Land of Israel and the ground that rests
- שָׁנָה שְׁבִיעִית / shanah shevi’it - the seventh year
- הֶפְקֵר / hefker - ownerless/open for others; not guarded like private treasure
- בִּטָּחוֹן / bitachon - trust; relying on Hashem
- וַתְרָנוּת / vatranut - generosity, yielding, letting go
Try it at home
Choose a plant, toy, or project that you really care about. Set a small “do not over-help” timer for a few minutes. While you wait, talk about this question: when does caring mean doing more, and when does caring mean giving something space?
You can also make a simple shmita rhythm clap: work, work, work, work, work, work, rest. Try it slowly, then talk about why the seventh beat feels different.
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