Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh

Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh: Shebhaṭ

53 min · 2. Feb. 2026
Episode Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh: Shebhaṭ Cover

Beschreibung

SHOW NOTES EPISODE OVERVIEW This month, we explore Shebhaṭ—the Hebrew month whose name means "to strike" or "to beat," reflecting winter's agricultural reality. We examine the fifteenth of Shebhaṭ (Tu BiShvaṭ), tracing its transformation from a simple legal boundary in the agricultural calendar to an elaborate mystical ritual, and ask: what's the difference between worship commanded by God and worship we invent for ourselves? KEY TOPICS THE NAME SHEBHAṬ * Etymology from Akkadian šabāṭu (to strike, to beat) * Connection to winter rains and agricultural cycles in the Land of Israel * The importance of grounding our calendar in physical, observable reality ḤAMISHA-'ASAR BISHBAṬ: THE HALAKHIC FOUNDATION * Mishnah Rosh haShanah 1:1—the New Year for Trees * Original function: a fiscal boundary for agricultural tithes (ma'aser) * Relevance to laws of 'orla (first three years' fruit prohibition) * Rabbi Yehudah haLewi's emphasis on Torah's "precise demarcations" (Kuzari II:50, III:49) * The fading of practical observance after the Temple's destruction THE PROBLEM: INNOVATION DISPLACING TRANSMISSION * Peri 'Eṣ Hadar and the Tu BiShvaṭ seder (published in Ḥemdat Yamim, 1731-32) * Connections to Sabbatean circles and Nathan of Gaza * The concept of ijtihad (personal striving) vs. qabbalah (authentic transmission) * Understanding Qabbalah as face-to-face reception—the intimacy of legitimate transmission * Why mystical innovation claims hierarchical authority over halakhic tradition TURKISH JEWISH PRACTICE: LOYALTY TO MESORAH * Reading the fifteen Shir haMa'aloth (Psalms 120-134) with cantillation * Eating fruits with corresponding verses from Shir haShirim (Song of Songs) * Reciting halakhically prescribed blessings * How authentic custom operates within transmitted boundaries * PDF booklet edited by Hakham Isaac Choua- https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]files/ugd/0019a0 [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]  RESTORATION AND AWAKENING * Jewish sovereignty and the return to agricultural mitsvoth * The sap rising after winter's dormancy—physical and spiritual restoration * Mishnah Pe'ah: agricultural law as the foundation of horizontal society * Girsa (perfect recitation) as planting Torah with roots * The connection between rooted study and branching interpretation (peirusho) PRIMARY SOURCES CITED * Mishnah Rosh haShanah 1:1 * Mishnah Pe'ah 1:1 * Rabbi Yehudah haLewi, Kuzari I:79, II:50, III:23, III:49 * Rambam on gemilut ḥasadim and Torah study * Isaiah 60:21 (Ladino translation) * Proverbs 3:18 KEY CONCEPTS * Qabbalah: Face-to-face transmission from legitimate authority (from root QBL—frontal, facing) * Ijtihad: Personal striving and innovation in worship (Arabic term used by haLewi) * Mesorah: Received tradition through the chain of transmission * Girsa: Perfect recitation that plants Torah with roots (related to Arabic gharasa—to plant) * Peirusho: Interpretation and ramifications that branch from rooted study * Horizontal society: Reciprocal community based on halakhic precision rather than mystical hierarchy QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. How do we distinguish between authentic tradition and innovation that claims traditional authority? 2. What role does precision play in maintaining the integrity of halakhic practice? 3. How can we mark meaningful dates in the Jewish calendar without inventing unauthorised ritual obligations? 4. What does the return to agricultural sovereignty mean for the restoration of Torah law? 5. How does girsa—perfect recitation of transmitted texts—serve as the foundation for legitimate interpretation? EPISODE QUOTES * "Qabbalah is reception face-to-face. The student sits before the teacher, watching their lips form the words, receiving directly from the source of authority." * "We don't need to invent mystical rituals to feel connected. The connection is in the qabbalah itself—in the intimate, tender act of receiving from teacher to student, generation to generation." * "After the long winter of exile, spring is coming because the Land and the Law are being reunited, and life is returning to its proper channels." * "This is the whole Torah, and the rest is its peirusho—its interpretation, its ramifications—go study." (Hillel) SUPPORT THE PODCAST This podcast is made possible by our community of supporters on Patreon. Find us at Horizontal Media to join the conversation and help us continue exploring Jewish time, wisdom, and practice through the lens of authentic transmission. Next Month: Adar—exploring joy, Purim, and the triumph of transmitted wisdom over those who sought to destroy it. Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh is a monthly exploration of the Hebrew calendar through Sephardic intellectual methodology, emphasising textual precision and authentic transmission over mystical innovation.

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Episode Siwan, The Appointed Season: Bricks, Covenant, and Memory Cover

Siwan, The Appointed Season: Bricks, Covenant, and Memory

ḤOKHMAT HA-ḤODESH | EPISODE 10 SHOW NOTES Host: Yosef Lopez Season/Month: Siwan (סִיוָן) Estimated Run Time: 40–45 minutes EPISODE OVERVIEW We stand in the immediate aftermath of Shabhū'oth—the fiftieth day of our journey from the physical liberation of Egypt to the spiritual revelation at Sinai. In this episode of Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh, host Yosef Lopez strips away centuries of myth and folklore to explore the raw historical, linguistic, and legal reality of the month of Siwan. From its ancient Babylonian origins as the "month of mud bricks" to a profound Andalusian re-reading of a famous Talmudic story about a mountain held over Israel's heads, we unpack what it truly means to receive and transmit a national covenant. We also bring historic clarity to popular holiday customs, separating late-stage mysticism and regional folklore from core halakha (Jewish law). KEY TAKEAWAYS & CHAPTER MARKERS I. Introduction: After the Mountain * Welcome to Siwan, the third month of the Hebrew calendar. * Shabhū'oth and the counting of the 'omer are behind us. The host frames the central question of the month: What does it mean to live in the aftermath of revelation, and what did we actually commemorate? II. Etymology: From Babylonian Bricks to Historical Covenant * The Mud Brick Season: In ancient Akkadian, Siwan was Simānu, meaning an "appointed, proper time." In Babylon, it was the specific season designated for making mud bricks, inaugurated ceremonially by the king using wet clay and straw. * The Exodus Contrast: In Egypt, Israel’s bondage was quantified entirely in taskmasters' brick counts. In the exact season the ancient world dedicated to brick-making, Israel arrives at Sinai—transforming a season of forced labor into a season of sovereign covenant. * Time vs. Myth: Tracing Simānu to the Hebrew word zeman (זְמַן – season/time). Unlike surrounding cultures that deified time (such as the Iranian cosmic deity Zurvān), the Hebrew calendar anchors zeman in verifiable, witnessed, and historically dateable events. III. Historical & Legal Grounding of Sinai * The 4 Steps of Treaty-Making: Far from a standard religious myth, Exodus 19–24 outlines the Sinai event using the precise structure of an ancient Near Eastern bilateral treaty: 1. The Proposal (God offers; the people deliberate and agree). 2. The Direct Revelation (The witnessed declaration of the Decalogue). 3. The Detailed Legislation (The transmission of civil and ritual laws). 4. The Formal Ratification (Sacrifices, pillars, and reading the book of the berit). * The Philosophy of Free Will: Because both God and humanity possess absolute freedom of choice, relationship cannot be established unilaterally through coercion or human-invented rites. It requires mutual consent. IV. Shabbat 88a: Overturning the Mountain Misreading * The Misinterpretation: A famous passage in Tractate Shabbat describes God overturning Mount Sinai over Israel like a "barrel" (gigith), threatening them with burial if they refuse the Tora. This has historically been misread as a narrative of divine duress. * The Andalusian Re-reading (Three Keys): 1. The Spoken Word: Israel is bound to the Tora because they willingly took an oath (na'aśeh we-nishmā'), not due to a threat. 2. The Looking Glass: The Aramaic Targum translates gigith as ispeqlarya (a transparent optical instrument/looking glass). The mountain wasn't a weapon; it was a medium of direct, intuitive vision that granted an entire nation the immediate certainty of a prophet. 3. Mod'a Rabba: The phrase doesn't mean a "legal disclaimer under duress," but a great public declaration. It is an urgent, multi-generational obligation to publicize the historical reality of Sinai to our children. V. The Real History of Shabhū'oth Customs * Tiqqun Leil Shabhū'oth (All-Night Study): Traced not to antiquity, but to a 1533 Kabbalistic circle in Greece led by R. Yoseph Qaro and R. Shelomoh Alqabheṣ. Grounded in the Zohar’s mystical metaphor of "adorning the cosmic bride," it is a late custom rather than a miṣwah (commandment), and is absent from the Shulḥan 'Arukh. * Eating Dairy: First mentioned by a 13th-century French Tosafist who admitted he knew no legal reason for it. Food historians note its parallel with standard dairy dishes served at the contemporary Christian festival of Whitsun (Pentecost) in Germany. * The Sephardic/Maimonidean Practice: True śimḥath ha-ḥagh (joy of the festival) requires a proper festive meal of meat and wine, as echoed by the Talmudic sage Rabh Yoseph ordering the "finest calf" for Shabhū'oth. VI. Contemporary Application & Closing * Host Yosef Lopez shares a personal reflection on staying up to study in a Jerusalem Beth Midrash, followed by a dawn walk to the Kotel (Western Wall) amidst an overwhelming river of people. * Ṣiyyun (Mount Zion): Explaining the word Ṣiyyun as a physical signpost or monument designed to guide a journey. The pilgrimage to Jerusalem was a physical, bodily reactivation of national memory. * The Modern Challenge: In an era where texts are ubiquitous but genuine chains of transmission are rare, Siwan challenges us to seek out authentic, face-to-face learning relationships. PRIMARY SOURCES & ACADEMIC REFERENCES > "On the first day of the third month of the Exodus from Egypt — on that very day — they arrived at the Sinai Desert." > > — Exodus 19:1 (The precision of "ba-yom ha-zeh" serves as the foundational basis for Israel's legal historical claim.) * Ancient Calendars: Mark Cohen, Cultic Calendars of the Ancient Near East (Context on the Mesopotamian "Month of Bricks" and the Kulla/Enki cults). * Talmudic Law & Interpretation: TB Shabbat 88a; Targum on Exodus 19:17 (ispeqlarya translation); Job 42:5. * Maimonidean Philosophy: Maimonides, Mishneh Tora (Hilkhoth Yesodhe ha-Tora for the epistemology of Sinai; Hilkhoth Yom Ṭobh 6:17–18 for the requirement of meat and wine); Igghereth Teman (Epistle to Yemen). * Customs History: Zohar, Emor 34–35; Elliott Horowitz, "Coffee, Coffeehouses, and the Nocturnal Rituals of Early Modern Jewry"; John Cooper, Eat and Be Satisfied: A Social History of Jewish Food (p. 119). * Andalusian Framework: Hakham José Faur, The Horizontal Society (Vol. I–II). SUPPORT THE SHOW If Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh brings depth to your calendar and your study, please consider supporting our work on Patreon. Your contributions directly sustain our research, production, and audio engineering workflows. patreon.com/horizontalmedia [https://patreon.com/horizontalmedia]

31. Mai 20261 h 1 min
Episode Iyyar — The Month of Healing, Memory, and the Road to Sinai Cover

Iyyar — The Month of Healing, Memory, and the Road to Sinai

SHOW NOTES: ---------------------------------------- EPISODE SUMMARY In this deep dive into the second month of the Hebrew calendar, Yosef explores Iyyar as a "bridge" between the liberation of Nisan and the revelation of Sivan. This episode moves beyond simple dates to examine the month through the lens of Maimonidean rationalism, historical-critical analysis, and ethical self-formation. We challenge popular narratives surrounding the 'Omer, investigate the textual mysteries of Ribbi 'Aqibha’s students, and reclaim Iyyar as a season of intentional character growth. ---------------------------------------- KEY TIMESTAMPS & SEGMENTS – Introduction: The Month of Becoming * Understanding Iyyar as the transition from ḥeruth (freedom) to standing before God. – Part One: The Etymology of Brilliance * Exploring the Babylonian Ayaru and the Hebrew name Ziw (Splendor). * The connection between the blossoming of nature and the illumination of the soul. – Part Two: The 'Omer as Orientation * Why we count: Maimonides’ perspective on longing vs. impatience. * Iyyar as the "long central span" of the bridge to Sinai. – Part Three: Ribbi 'Aqibha’s Students & The Halakha of Mourning * A critical look at Yebhamoth 62b: Why did 24,000 students die? * The Maimonidean stance: Why there are no codified mourning restrictions in the Mishneh Torah. * Distinguishing between Sephardic Rishonim and later Ashkenazic minhagh. – Part Four: Lag La-'Omer and the Zohar * Investigating the origins of the 33rd day of the 'Omer. * The historical authenticity of the Zohar and the construction of the Ribbi Shim'on bar Yoḥai yahrzeit. * The principle of Torath Emeth (Verified Torah). – Part Five: The Mystery of the Girsa (Textual Variants) * Did they die of a plague or Roman persecution? * Comparing the Spanish (Sefaradhith) and French (Ṣarphathith) recensions of the Iggeret of Rab Sherira Ga'on. – Part Seven & Eight: 'Abhoth and the Ethics of Maimonides * Pirqe 'Abhoth as an epistemological chain of transmission. * The Shemoneh Peraqim (Eight Chapters): Moral virtue as an acquired habit. * The "Middle Path": Why the 'Omer is for self-formation, not self-mortification. – Part Nine: Iyyar as the Month of Healing * The acronym: 'Ani Hashem Roph'ekha (I am the Lord your Healer). * Healing the "wound" of liberation and the trauma of bondage. ---------------------------------------- PRIMARY SOURCES REFERENCED * Talmud Babhli: Yebhamoth 62b * Maimonides (Rambam): Mishneh Torah (Hilkhoth 'Abhel), Moreh Nebhukhim (III:43), Shemoneh Peraqim * History: Iggeret of Rab Sherira Ga'on (Spanish vs. French recensions) * Tanakh: Melakhim I 6:1 (Ziw), Shemoth 15:26 (Healing) * Modern Thought: The Horizontal Society by Jose Faur ---------------------------------------- CONNECT WITH US * Support the Show: Join our community on Patreon to help us keep producing high-quality educational content. * Share: If this episode changed how you view the calendar, please share it with a friend or student. * Follow: Subscribe to Horizontal Media on YouTube for more insights into the Hebrew calendar. Next Month: Sivan — The Mountain and the Gift.

13. Mai 202641 min
Episode Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodhesh — Nisan Cover

Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodhesh — Nisan

"The House of Freedom: On Ḥeruth, 'Abduth, and the Threshold Between Them" Host: Yosef Lopez Opening: The Paradox of Nisan * Nisan is called ha-Ḥodhesh ha-Ri'shon (the first month) by the Torah, marking the beginning of ‘am Israel as a people and their exodus from slavery to Autonomy. * The name Nisan is Babylonian (Nisanu). The Torah transforms its meaning: * Babylonian context: Nisanu was the month of the Akitu festival, which reinforced a cosmic hierarchy and vertical power structure (gods above, king beneath). * Torah's declaration: "Ha-ḥodhesh ha-zeh lakhem ro'sh ḥodhashim" (Shemoth 12:2) establishes that this month belongs to the people (Lakhem—for you), inaugurating a people who stand in direct covenant with the Creator, repudiating the mythological-political structure of Babylon. Part One: Defining 'Abduth (Bondage/Servitude) * The Household Dissolved: Egypt's domination dissolved the Israelite household (baith Ya'aqobh) and reduced persons to units of labor. * 'Abduth Defined: The condition of a person who has become a tool, where labor is stripped of meaning and placed entirely at the disposal of another's will. * The Illusion of Bondage: Slavery often presents itself as the natural order, and people in bondage often fail to recognize it. The Haggadhah's declaration, "This year, here, slaves," is the first act of freedom—to recognize current bondage. * Sisyphus as 'Abduth: Albert Camus's call to "imagine Sisyphus happy" by embracing the inescapable repetition is, from the Torah's perspective, the deepest form of 'abduth—the decision to embrace the illusion of the human condition. * Ḥeruth Begins: Freedom begins not with escape, but with the refusal to accept bondage; God heard the Israelites' "cry" because they had not resigned themselves to their condition (Shemoth 2:23–25). Part Two: Defining Ḥeruth (Freedom/Autonomy) * Ḥeruth is not Lawlessness: It is not freedom to follow impulse, but the positive condition of living according to reason and law, answerable to a standard that transcends the whim of any ruler. * Source of Freedom: The Mishnah in 'Abhoth states, "There is no free person except one who occupies himself with Torah" (Abot 6:2). * Covenant over Escape: Hakham José Faur notes that Israel sought freedom not merely through escape, but through covenant—a binding commitment to a law that confers equal dignity on every person. * The Sedhèr (Order): The Passover ritual insists that order is the foundation of freedom, not its enemy. By reclining and eating be-dherekh ḥeruth (in the manner of free people), the same maṣṣah of oppression becomes the bread of liberation by how it is received. Part Three: The Bayith (Household) and Liberation * The bayith is the essential unit for Jewish observance, memory, and resistance. * God addressed the Israelites as households when commanding the Pesaḥ lamb (Shemoth 12:3), and divine protection passed over batim (houses). * The Aramaic Targum translates "a single house" as a ḥabhurah (a corporation or legal entity). * The Israelites merited liberation by being organized as a household; unlike Plato's solitary philosopher, the movement toward freedom happens communally. Part Four: The Mezuzah — A Covenantal Threshold * The mezuzah is the permanent successor to the blood smeared on the doorposts and lintel on the night of the final plague (Shemoth 12:7, 23). * Symbolic Transformation: The physical placement (the mode) on the doorpost remains, but the substance changes from sacrificial blood to Scripture (the words of the covenant). This declares that the ultimate bond is found in the Law, not sacramental blood. * Maimonides' Purpose: The miṣwah of mezuzah is to remind a person, upon entering and exiting, of the unity, knowledge, and love of God, strengthening their spiritual footing. * Protection through Intellect: Maimonides insisted that true protection flows through a person's clarity of intellect and purity of thought, not through the mezuzah as a charm or amulet. Part Five: The Haggadhah — Memory that Moves Forward * Encoding and Decoding: Jewish tradition transmits collective experience by encoding the original event into a form that future generations decode and then re-encode for the next, reflecting the root Sh-N-H, which means both to repeat and to change. * The commandment is to tell (we-higgathtah) and speak of the Exodus (Debharim 6:7), which involves transformation and engagement, not mere verbatim recitation. * The Sedhèr is a set of themes for discourse and conversation, demanding active participation from everyone at the table. * Halakhic Instruction: The Haggadhah insists that "In every generation, each person is obligated to see himself as though he himself went out from Egypt," meaning the Exodus is a description of the human condition. * Repetition without transformation (mere reproduction) is the first step toward forgetting. Part Six: The Counting of the 'Omer * Joy, Not Mourning: The 'omer is the 49-day count from Pesaḥ (liberation) to Shabu'oth (receiving the Torah at Sinai). It is inherently a season of joy, growth, and anticipation—the "walk between Egypt and Sinai". * The contemporary association with gloom and restrictions is the residue of historical trauma and exile, not the original character of the season. Ḥeruth demands freedom from defining oneself by trauma. * Law on Missed Counting: While popular Ashkenazic practice often dictates continuing the count without a berakhah if a night is missed: * Maimonides' Ruling (Sephardic Practice): Maimonides rules that each night is an independent miṣwah. A person who misses a night or two should continue counting with a berakhah for all remaining nights. * The only change is omitting the word temimoth ("complete weeks") on the final night. The 'omer asks a person to keep walking, not to begin again. ---------------------------------------- Closing Summary * The Torah's vision of ḥeruth is a positive, disciplined condition: a covenanted space marked by values, living memory, and a household. * The rituals of Nisan re-activate memory from the inside out, re-enacting covenant and autonomy. * The hope le-shanah ha-ba'ah bi-Yerushalayim (next year in Jerusalem) joins personal awareness of bondage to the political aspiration of a people with a home.

31. März 202657 min
Episode 'Adhar — The Month of Expansion and Hidden Providence Cover

'Adhar — The Month of Expansion and Hidden Providence

Show Notes: In this episode, host Yosef Lopez explores the twelfth month of the Hebrew calendar, 'Adhar. Often misunderstood as a time of mere frivolity, Rabbi Lopez peels back the layers of tradition to reveal a month of deep intellectual assembly, the true linguistic root of joy (śimḥah), and the sophisticated legal architecture the Rabbis used to build the holiday of Purim. KEY THEMES & HIGHLIGHTS * The Etymology of 'Adhar: Derived from the Babylonian Addaru, meaning "to be dark" or "clouded." It represents the final darkness of winter before the agricultural and spiritual renewal of Nisan (Spring). * The Yarḥei Kallah: A deep dive into the forgotten history of 'Adhar as a month of national intellectual assembly. Lopez explains how the Babylonian Talmud was physically produced during these biannual month-long intensive study sessions led by Rabh 'Ashe. * Redefining Joy (Śimḥah): Using the Sepher haShorashim of the Radaq, the episode explores śimḥah not as an emotion, but as expansion and flourishing. * The linguistic link: The connection between ś-m-ḥ (joy) and ṣ-m-ḥ (to sprout/grow). * The Rabbinic Scale: How the "laughing" (expansive) handbreadth (śoḥeq) contrasts with the "grieved" (contracted) handbreadth ('aṣebh). * The Megillah as "Nes Nistar": A meditation on hidden miracles. Unlike the Exodus, God’s name is absent from the Book of Esther, teaching us to find divine providence within the "natural" flow of history and human agency. * The Architecture of Purim: How the Rabbis deliberately mirrored the structure of the Biblical festivals (Yom Ṭobh) through four specific miṣwoth: 1. Qeri'ath haMeghillah (Public Proclamation) 2. Se'udath Purim (Festive Meal) 3. Mishloaḥ Manoth (Social Bonding) 4. Matanoth la'ebhyonim (Gifts to the Poor - prioritized by Rambam as the highest form of joy). DEEP DIVE: WHY THE MEGILLAH ENDURES One of the most striking points of the episode is the Rambam’s ruling that while the books of the Prophets may be "annulled" in the Messianic age, the Megillath 'Esther will remain, alongside the Five Books of the Tora. * Reason 1: It is the primary guide for perceiving God in exile (Galuth). * Reason 2: It represents the transition from prophetic revelation to Halakhic/Rabbinic authority. * Reason 3: It provides a model for redemption (Ge'ullah) that operates within the natural order—a concept central to the Rambam's Messianic vision. NOTABLE QUOTES > "Joy and sorrow, in the rabbinic imagination, are not merely feelings. They are states of expansion and contraction. Śimḥah is the soul expanding. 'Eṣebh is the soul diminishing." > "The Megillah is the founding document of galuth Judaism — of a people learning to navigate history without explicit divine intervention, yet still perceiving God's presence in unfolding events." PRACTICAL HALAKHAH DISCUSSED * Drinking on Purim: Clarifying the phrase "adh delo' yadha'." Lopez argues that because drinking is tied to the se'udah (dignified meal), it is an expression of liberty and dignity, not a license for lawless intoxication. * Sepher vs. Iggereth: The technical debate between Rabh and Shemu'el on whether the Megillah is a "Book" or a "Letter," and how our current practice (unfolding the scroll) reflects a compromise between the two. SUPPORT THE PODCAST If you enjoyed this exploration of Sephardic intellectual tradition, consider supporting us on Patreon under Horizontal Media. Your support allows us to continue providing high-level Tora scholarship. Next Month: Nisan — The Season of our Freedom (Ḥeruth).

15. Feb. 202652 min
Episode Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh: Shebhaṭ Cover

Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh: Shebhaṭ

SHOW NOTES EPISODE OVERVIEW This month, we explore Shebhaṭ—the Hebrew month whose name means "to strike" or "to beat," reflecting winter's agricultural reality. We examine the fifteenth of Shebhaṭ (Tu BiShvaṭ), tracing its transformation from a simple legal boundary in the agricultural calendar to an elaborate mystical ritual, and ask: what's the difference between worship commanded by God and worship we invent for ourselves? KEY TOPICS THE NAME SHEBHAṬ * Etymology from Akkadian šabāṭu (to strike, to beat) * Connection to winter rains and agricultural cycles in the Land of Israel * The importance of grounding our calendar in physical, observable reality ḤAMISHA-'ASAR BISHBAṬ: THE HALAKHIC FOUNDATION * Mishnah Rosh haShanah 1:1—the New Year for Trees * Original function: a fiscal boundary for agricultural tithes (ma'aser) * Relevance to laws of 'orla (first three years' fruit prohibition) * Rabbi Yehudah haLewi's emphasis on Torah's "precise demarcations" (Kuzari II:50, III:49) * The fading of practical observance after the Temple's destruction THE PROBLEM: INNOVATION DISPLACING TRANSMISSION * Peri 'Eṣ Hadar and the Tu BiShvaṭ seder (published in Ḥemdat Yamim, 1731-32) * Connections to Sabbatean circles and Nathan of Gaza * The concept of ijtihad (personal striving) vs. qabbalah (authentic transmission) * Understanding Qabbalah as face-to-face reception—the intimacy of legitimate transmission * Why mystical innovation claims hierarchical authority over halakhic tradition TURKISH JEWISH PRACTICE: LOYALTY TO MESORAH * Reading the fifteen Shir haMa'aloth (Psalms 120-134) with cantillation * Eating fruits with corresponding verses from Shir haShirim (Song of Songs) * Reciting halakhically prescribed blessings * How authentic custom operates within transmitted boundaries * PDF booklet edited by Hakham Isaac Choua- https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]files/ugd/0019a0 [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf [https://www.sephardicbrotherhood.com/_files/ugd/0019a0_7815476f92454b6ba59d17cba725ffa7.pdf]  RESTORATION AND AWAKENING * Jewish sovereignty and the return to agricultural mitsvoth * The sap rising after winter's dormancy—physical and spiritual restoration * Mishnah Pe'ah: agricultural law as the foundation of horizontal society * Girsa (perfect recitation) as planting Torah with roots * The connection between rooted study and branching interpretation (peirusho) PRIMARY SOURCES CITED * Mishnah Rosh haShanah 1:1 * Mishnah Pe'ah 1:1 * Rabbi Yehudah haLewi, Kuzari I:79, II:50, III:23, III:49 * Rambam on gemilut ḥasadim and Torah study * Isaiah 60:21 (Ladino translation) * Proverbs 3:18 KEY CONCEPTS * Qabbalah: Face-to-face transmission from legitimate authority (from root QBL—frontal, facing) * Ijtihad: Personal striving and innovation in worship (Arabic term used by haLewi) * Mesorah: Received tradition through the chain of transmission * Girsa: Perfect recitation that plants Torah with roots (related to Arabic gharasa—to plant) * Peirusho: Interpretation and ramifications that branch from rooted study * Horizontal society: Reciprocal community based on halakhic precision rather than mystical hierarchy QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. How do we distinguish between authentic tradition and innovation that claims traditional authority? 2. What role does precision play in maintaining the integrity of halakhic practice? 3. How can we mark meaningful dates in the Jewish calendar without inventing unauthorised ritual obligations? 4. What does the return to agricultural sovereignty mean for the restoration of Torah law? 5. How does girsa—perfect recitation of transmitted texts—serve as the foundation for legitimate interpretation? EPISODE QUOTES * "Qabbalah is reception face-to-face. The student sits before the teacher, watching their lips form the words, receiving directly from the source of authority." * "We don't need to invent mystical rituals to feel connected. The connection is in the qabbalah itself—in the intimate, tender act of receiving from teacher to student, generation to generation." * "After the long winter of exile, spring is coming because the Land and the Law are being reunited, and life is returning to its proper channels." * "This is the whole Torah, and the rest is its peirusho—its interpretation, its ramifications—go study." (Hillel) SUPPORT THE PODCAST This podcast is made possible by our community of supporters on Patreon. Find us at Horizontal Media to join the conversation and help us continue exploring Jewish time, wisdom, and practice through the lens of authentic transmission. Next Month: Adar—exploring joy, Purim, and the triumph of transmitted wisdom over those who sought to destroy it. Ḥokhmat ha-Ḥodesh is a monthly exploration of the Hebrew calendar through Sephardic intellectual methodology, emphasising textual precision and authentic transmission over mystical innovation.

2. Feb. 202653 min