• In
Abraham Goldfaden's 1880 play
The Flying Matchmaker, Pinkhsel surmises that Kuni-Leml, the man betrothed to his daughter Carolina, is a "lamed-vavnik" because of the mysterious changes to his behavior and ability. In fact, it is Max, Carolina's love interest, who keeps reentering the house disguised as Kuni-Leml. •
Hans Rehfisch wrote the 1925 play
Nickel and the 36 Righteous. •
Jorge Luis Borges has an entry for the "Lamed Wufniks" in his
Book of Imaginary Beings (1957–1969). • In
Andre Schwarz-Bart's 1959 novel
The Last of the Just, one Just Man of the Lamed-Vov is designated in each generation of the Levy family. Their legacy spans more than eight centuries. The original French title was
Le dernier des justes. • In
Gary Jennings's 1984 novel
The Journeyer,
Marco Polo is periodically saved from death by the 36. The rescuer's identity is never explicit, and he may be more than one of the Righteous Men. • In the 1991 issue "Three Septembers and a January" of
Neil Gaiman's comic
The Sandman,
Death tells the soul of
Joshua Norton: "they say that the world rests on the backs of 36 living saints—36 unselfish men and women. Because of them the world continues to exist. They are the secret kings and queens of this world." The implication is that he was one of the tzadikim. •
Jonathan Carroll's 1992 fantasy novella "Uh-Oh City" features one of the Lamed Vav. • In the 1998 documentary
The Cruise, it is suggested that the film's subject,
Timothy "Speed" Levitch, a tour guide for Manhattan's Gray Line double-decker buses, is a Lamed Vovnik. • The protagonist of
Jodi Picoult's 1999 novel
Keeping Faith is believed to be one of the Lamed Vovnik by a rabbi. • In
Werner Herzog's 2001 film
Invincible, a fictionalized account of the life of Jewish strongman
Zishe Breitbart (aka Siegmund Breitbart), a rabbi tells Zishe (played by
Jouko Ahola) that he may be one of the 36 just men who feel the suffering of the world. •
Michael Haneke's 2003 movie
Time of the Wolf refers to the 36 and hints that one character is one of them. • In
Nicole Krauss's 2005 novel
The History of Love, Alma's brother Bird believes himself to be a Lamed Vovnik. •
Sam Bourne's 2006 novel
The Righteous Men depicts the murders of the 36, one by one. • The protagonist of
Michael Chabon's 2007 novel ''
The Yiddish Policemen's Union'' is involved in the case of a murder victim who may have been the
Tzadik Ha-dor. • The 2007 novel
The Book of Names, by Jill Gregory and
Karen Tintori, is based on the principles of the Kabbalah, including the 36 Lamed Vovniks. • In the 2008 TV film
God on Trial, a rabbi in Auschwitz is proclaimed by a fellow prisoner to be one of the 36. • In the 2009
Coen Brothers film
A Serious Man, a rabbi says in a character's
eulogy that he might have been a Lamed Vovnik. • In
Colum McCann's 2009 novel
Let the Great World Spin, the narrator mentions hearing of the myth of "thirty-six hidden saints" while in college and compares the actions of his Christian brother Corrigan to one of the saints. • In "Music of the Spheres", a 2012 first-season episode of the TV series
Touch, Jacob "Jake" Bohm, a mute boy who mysteriously feels the suffering of those in his path and aims to adjust their fates for the better, is revealed as possibly one of the "Lamed Vav Tzadikim" by a
Hasidic man. In the second season, Jake and others who have special gifts are referred to as members of the 36; throughout the episodes they are exploited for their abilities and hunted down by one who believes they have too much power. The final episode considers Kabbalah and the mystical roots of the legend of 36. • In
Ted Dekker's 2013 novel
Eyes Wide Open, the 36 are a group of children called Project Showdown. Christian monks raised orphans to follow the path of light, attempting to rebirth the Earth into a new age. • In "Oh Holy Night", a 2016 episode of the TV series
Transparent, a rabbi discusses who the 36 people who sustain the world's righteousness may be. "Who are these 36? We don't know. Even the 36 don't know. So what is the lesson? The lesson is to treat each other...as if we might be one. Or who knows? You might be standing next to one now." • In the 2017 TV series
Kevin (Probably) Saves the World, the title character is chosen to be a righteous soul who has to find and initiate the other 35. ==Notes==