The only way one would truly trust another is if he knew him since birth and is confident he will be by his side his entire life. When this exclusive relationship is strengthened by countless acts of support and kindness, his trust in him will grow, confident he will always be taken care of. How much more so when he becomes aware that no one else in the world is as powerful, has more connections, can help him or harm him. and is the only one he can call on and rely on.
pg 369
Clearing the Way
Torah-prohibited melachos (which are always forbidden during Shemittah) and the activities forbidden by the Sages, is that Rabbinic melachos are only prohibited when they are being done to cultivate plants, and not for other reasons. For example, trimming a tree’s branches helps it grow fuller and healthier, and may not be done during Shemittah. But the branches may be trimmed (assuming that no fruits are growing on them) if they are blocking a sidewalk or path, or covering a succah. When doing so, it is best that they are not trimmed by a professional, or, that the professional trim them in a manner that is different than usual.Pre-Shemittah Prohibitions
Planting is one of the agricultural tasks forbidden during Shemittah. The Sages forbade some types of planting in the pre-Shemittah period, as well: a fruit tree (whether a seed, or a sapling) may not be planted within the forty-five-day period before Shemittah, after 15 Av. Similarly, one who would like to uproot a fruit tree or sapling and replant it in a different place may only do so under conditions which continue the tree’s present orlah status, and does not necessitate beginning the three-year orlah count anew. (A halachic authority should be consulted.)
Some Poskim rule that any plant may not be planted close to Shemittah under circumstances that will cause it to take root during the Shemittah year. Since trees take fourteen days to take root, and other types of plants (such as flowers, vegetables, and other vegetation that grows directly from the ground) three days, this opinion maintains that even non-fruit trees may not be planted after 15 Elul (two weeks before Rosh Hashanah), and other plants within three days before the commencement of Shemittah, on Rosh Hashanah.
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