Twenty-one years in the making, Sabbath Queen follows Amichai Lau-Lavie’s journey from radical drag queen to influential rabbi of a God-optional, artist-driven New York synagogue. A Q&A with Lau-Lavie and director Sandi DuBowski, moderated by Rachel Levin, immediately follows the screening, along with a reception for all ticketholders in Founders Courtyard.
This is a past program
This program took place on
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
About the Program
Sandi DuBowski’s epic documentary Sabbath Queen—shot over the span of twenty-one years—follows Amichai Lau-Lavie, an Israeli descended from an unbroken line of thirty-eight rabbis stretching back a thousand years. Yet as Sabbath Queen opens, Lau-Lavie is newly arrived in New York in the late 1990s, a young gay man declaring “Artists are the new rabbis” and appearing around the city in drag as Rebbetzin Hadassah Gross, the widow of six Hasidic rabbis (all from the same extended family). As the years pass, Lau-Lavie embraces a range of creative spiritual endeavors, including Storahtelling and Lab/Shul—until he shocks everyone with his decision to become a rabbi himself, studying in the Conservative tradition of Judaism. Sabbath Queen is witness to Lau-Lavie’s unfailing courage and grace, as he grapples with key questions of who we are and who we will be. Stimulating and moving, DuBowski’s film ends with Lau-Lavie’s words on Israel and Palestine post-October 7 as he evokes the challenge of our lifetime: “How do we reimagine our sacred traditions to achieve peace?”
Join us immediately following the screening for a Q&A with Lau-Lavie and DuBowski, moderated by Rachel Levin. Also enjoy a post-screening reception outdoors for all ticketholders.
About the Participants
Social activist and storyteller, writer and community leader, Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie (he/him) is the Co-Founding Spiritual Leader of the Lab/Shul community in NYC and the creator of the ritual theater company Storahtelling, Inc. Israeli born, he’s been living in New York since 1998. He received his rabbinical ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in 2016, the 39th generation of rabbis in his family—the first one to be openly queer. Rabbi Amichai is the subject of Sabbath Queen, Sandi DuBowski’s documentary film, 21 years in the making, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in June 2024. Rabbi Amichai serves on the Executive Board of Rabbis for Human Rights, is a co-founding member of the Jewish Emergent Network, a founding faculty member of the Reboot Network, and serves on the Advisory Board of the Sulha Peace Project for Israeli and Palestinian peacemakers, the Leadership Council of the New York Jewish Agenda, the Advisory Council for the Institute for Jewish Spirituality and as an advisor to Jerusalem Open House for Pride and Tolerance. He’s been named "an iconoclastic mystic" by Time Out New York, "a calm voice for peace" by NPR, a "rock star" by The New York Times, a "Judaic Pied Piper" by the Denver Westword, a "maverick spiritual leader" by The Times of Israel, and "one of the most interesting thinkers in the Jewish world" by the Jewish Week. In 2017, he was named one of America’s Top 50 rabbis by The Forward. In June 2017, Rabbi Amichai published The JOY Proposal with a radical response to the reality of Intermarriage and taking on a personal position on this issue, including his resignation from the Rabbinical Assembly of the Conservative Movement. In 2022, Rabbi Amichai began publishing Below the Bible Belt, a daily digital project extended over forty-two months, critically queering and re-reading all 929 chapters of the Hebrew Bible. Rabbi Amichai is Abba to Alice, Ezra, and Cai-Hallel.
Sandi DuBowski is the Director/Producer of Sabbath Queen, Director/Producer of Trembling Before G-d, Producer of A Jihad for Love, and Co-Producer of Budrus. His award-winning work has screened at Sundance, Berlin, Tribeca, and Toronto, theatrically released in 150 cities, and broadcast on ZDF/Arte, BBC, Channel 4, and PBS. In 2020, he was invited to become a member of the Documentary Branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. DuBowski spearheaded a groundbreaking impact campaign with the award-winning Trembling Before G-d, personally conducting 850 live events for over 250,000 people which changed the lives of countless individuals, their families, religious leaders, and communities around the world. Feature stories on the project appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, NPR, The Globe and Mail, and BBC News. From 2009–2016, DuBowski worked with over 125 of the world’s best social justice documentaries as the Outreach Director of Doc Society’s Good Pitch. He is co-founder of The Creative Resistance, a collective of media makers who create award-winning political ads and design. In the mid-1990’s he began his media and activism work at Planned Parenthood Federation of America focused on the Christian right and the anti-abortion movement. Three generations of DuBowski’s family made chocolate syrup in Deep Coastal Brooklyn.
Rachel Levin is President of The Hearthland Foundation, a family foundation established by Kate Capshaw and Steven Spielberg to help build a more just, equitable, and connected America—one creative act at a time. With storytelling and art at its core, the foundation focuses on supporting efforts to build a shared democracy, tell a more honest and generative American narrative, and foster a culture of accompaniment and care. Rachel is also the founder and president of Fundamental, a boutique philanthropic and political consulting firm. She has a background in public policy and government and has worked in philanthropy for close to three decades. She is a senior advisor to the Righteous Persons Foundation and the co-founder of Reboot, a network of Jewish creatives. Rachel also serves on the board of the Jim Joseph Foundation.