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Marvin Hier

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Name
  
Marvin Hier

Role
  
Film producer


Marvin Hier Jewish 100 2014 Marvin Hier Community Jewish

Movies
  
The Prime Ministers: The Pioneers, Against the Tide, Liberation

Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature

Nominations
  
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Screenplay

Similar People
  
Simon Wiesenthal, Mark Jonathan Harris, Yehuda Avner, Martin Gilbert, Orson Welles

Organizations founded
  
Simon Wiesenthal Center

1980 elizabeth taylor and rabbi marvin hier at simon wiesenthal center banquet


Rabbi Marvin (Moshe Chaim) Hier (מרווין היר/האייר/הייר) (born 1939 in New York City) is the dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, its Museum of Tolerance and of Moriah, the Center's film division.

Contents

Marvin Hier Marvin Hier Pictures Premiere Of quotAgainst The Tidequot Zimbio

Rabbi marvin hier delivers a prayer at inauguration day 2017


Early life

Marvin Hier Ron Meyer and Marvin Hier Photos Zimbio

Hier was born in 1939 in New York City, His parents came from Poland; his father worked as a lamp polisher after arriving in New York in 1917. Hier grew up on the Lower East Side attending the Rabbi Shlomo Kluger Yeshiva on Houston Street for elementary school and the Rabbi Jacob Joseph School for high-school and six years post-high school. Hier received smicha in 1962 from Rabbi Mendel Kravitz, rosh yeshiva of Rabbi Jacob Joseph School.

Career

Marvin Hier media4snbcnewscomjMSNBCComponentsPhotonew

In the 1960s, Hier served as assistant rabbi and, in 1964, became rabbi of Congregation Schara Tzedeck in Vancouver. In 1977, following a visit to Holocaust sites in Europe, Rabbi Hier came to Los Angeles to create the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Under his leadership, the Center has become one of the foremost Jewish human rights agencies in the world, with a constituency of more than 400,000 families. The Center maintains offices throughout the United States, and in Canada, Europe, Israel and Argentina.

Marvin Hier Interview with SWC39s Rabbi Marvin Hier on the enemy Israel

Hier is the recipient of two Academy Awards - in 1997, as co-producer of The Long Way Home, which offers new insights into the critical post World War II period between 1945 and 1948 and the suffering of the tens of thousands of refugees who survived the Holocaust, and in 1981 as co-producer and co-writer for Genocide, a documentary on the Holocaust.

In 1990, he wrote and co-produced the award-winning Echoes That Remain, a documentary on pre-World War II European Jewish life, and in 1994, Hier produced and co-wrote, Liberation, the first production of Moriah Films. Under Rabbi Hier's direction, the Wiesenthal Center has served as consultant to Steven Spielberg's epic Schindler's List, and ABC Television's miniseries adaptation of Herman Wouk's novel, War and Remembrance. He is the recipient of an honorary degree and, in 1993 was made a Chevalier in the Ordre National du Mérite by French President François Mitterrand.

Newsweek describes Rabbi Hier as the following, "Hier is one phone call away from almost every world leader, journalist and Hollywood studio head. He is the dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the Museum of Tolerance and Moriah Films." In 2007 and 2008 Rabbi Marvin Hier was named the most influential rabbi in America by Newsweek.

Hier founded the Yeshiva University High Schools of Los Angeles (YULA) and was the dean of the school until the 2006-2007 school year.

President George W. Bush appointed Hier to serve on the Honorary Delegation to accompany him to Jerusalem for the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the State of Israel in May 2008.

In 2009, he criticized Vatican cardinal Renato Martino over his comment that Gaza was a "big concentration camp". He later criticized the lifting of the excommunication of bishop Richard Williamson, a member of the Society of Saint Pius X.

A $100 million Museum of Tolerance and Human Dignity, a project of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles run by Rabbi Marvin Hier, is set to be built in Jerusalem, Israel.

In 2013, the Jewish Daily Forward called Hier the "most overpaid" executive of a Jewish non-profit. Hier's family received nearly $1.3 million in 2012 from the Simon Weisenthal Center.

He gave an invocation at the Inauguration of Donald Trump.

He was "the first Orthodox rabbi ever to give a benediction at an American president's inauguration". He cited psalm 137: "By the rivers of Babylon ... We wept as we remembered Zion. If I forget thee, Oh Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill. " Eleven days later, fourteen Jewish community centers across ten states (and one Canadian province) were targeted with bomb threats  ; Rabbi Heir had no public statement on the threats.

Personal life

Hier resides in Los Angeles, California. He has 2 sons and 8 grandchildren.

References

Marvin Hier Wikipedia