Early years In 1999, Buchdahl was invested as a
cantor, and in 2001, she was ordained as a
rabbi by
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, a seminary for Reform Judaism. She was the first East Asian-American to be ordained as a rabbi, and the first Asian-American to be ordained as a
hazzan (cantor) anywhere in the world. She became assistant rabbi and cantor at Westchester Reform Temple, which in 2003 had membership of over 1,200 families. She is the first woman and the first Asian-American to be their Senior Rabbi. In December 2014, she was welcomed by President
Barack Obama to lead the prayers at the
White House Hanukkah celebration. At the podium, Buchdahl commented on how special the scene was, asking the President if he believed America's founding fathers could possibly have pictured that a female Asian-American rabbi would one day be at the White House leading Jewish prayers in front of the African-American president. Her speech on the meaning of Hannukah and religious freedom met with applause and cheers. Writer
Abigail Pogrebin, who also served as President of Central Synagogue (where Buchdahl is Senior Rabbi), noted that as Buchdahl "stood alongside the African-American president and led us in the Hebrew blessing over the candles, there was a moving magnificence both in that unlikely tableau and in the sound of a Jewish prayer filling The People's house". On March 22, 2019, Buchdahl opened the doors of Central Synagogue to hundreds of worshipers from a nearby
mosque ravaged by fire. In December 2019, the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency named her among the Jews who defined the 2010s, and stated, "The choice of Buchdahl to replace the retiring Rabbi Peter Rubinstein elevated a woman and a Jew of color to a position of virtually unprecedented prominence in the Jewish world and made Buchdahl a potent symbol of the changing face of American Judaism." On January 15, 2022, Buchdahl was called by and spoke with the hostage-taker in the
Colleyville synagogue hostage crisis at the Congregation Beth Israel synagogue in
Colleyville, Texas. The hostage taker said that he had a bomb, and asked Buchdahl to use her position of influence to secure
Aafia Siddiqui's release from prison. After the call, Buchdahl immediately contacted law enforcement. Buchdahl conducts
interfaith weddings at Central Synagogue for couples who say they "are committed to creating a Jewish household". She appears in the PBS documentary
18 Voices Sing Kol Nidre. In 2011, Buchdahl was named by
Newsweek and
The Daily Beast as one of America's "Most Influential Rabbis", and in 2012 by
The Daily Beast as one of America's "Top 50 Rabbis". Buchdahl was recognized as one of the top five in
The Forwards 2014 "Forward Fifty", a list of American Jews who had the most impact on the national scene in the previous year. The 2022 art exhibit “Holy Sparks”, shown among other places at the
Dr. Bernard Heller Museum, featured art about twenty-four female rabbis who were firsts in some way; Laurie Gross created the artwork about Buchdahl that was in that exhibit. ==Views==