The Simon Wiesenthal Center
Arriving in Los Angeles in 1977 with a $500,000 gift from Canadian
Jewish businessman Samuel Belzberg, Rabbi Marvin Hier lost no time
launching his dream project: the Simon Wiesenthal Center. In the
years that followed, Hier succeeded in building the Center, named
after the well-known "Nazi hunter," into one of the world's most
influential Jewish organizations.
"Now second in membership only to B'nai B'rith International with
380,000 members," noted the Los Angeles Times in 1990, "the Simon
Wiesenthal Center at times rivals the venerable American Jewish
Committee, the Anti-Defamation League and the World Jewish Congress
for its impact and access to world leaders."1 Today, five years
later, the Center's power and impact are, if anything, even more
formidable.
Fear mongering and 'Holocaustomania'
Hier achieved all this, and so quickly, because he hit on a
winning formula for raising vast sums of money from American Jews:
highly emotional appeals to raw fear with sensationalistic
exploitation of the Holocaust story.
Hier and his colleagues never cease harping on the danger of
anti-Semitism (or, as the Center spells it "antisemitism"). In its
wide range of propaganda materials, including videotapes and
fund-raising mailings, and especially in its glossy magazine,
Response, the Center conjures up a paranoid fantasy world in which a
sinister international network of neo-Nazis, Islamic extremists and
other anti-Jewish forces of "hate" are on the march everywhere,
plotting a murderous new "Final Solution" of all Jews.
The Center projects a paradoxical image of American Jewry: Fabulously
wealthy and influential, but simultaneously threatened with physical
extermination. Only the eternally vigilant Simon Wiesenthal Center,
its publications suggest, protects Jews against a dangerous worldwide
"hate" conspiracy and a new "Final Solution."
"In America," writes New York Times Deputy Media Editor Judith Miller
in her 1990 book, One, by One, by One, "the lowest common denominator
often sets the agenda. The Holocaust is not immune from this
tendency."2
"Marvin Hier and the Center will always cry anti-Semitism," a
renowned scholar told two Los Angeles Times writers, who summed up:
"To get people to pay attention to his battle against anti-Semitism,
Hier refuses to let anyone forget the Holocaust even for a
minute."3
As even the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) of B'nai B'rith has
acknowledged, though, the Wiesenthal Center makes "inaccurate" and
"exaggerated claims" about anti-Semitism to raise money. In a 1984
internal memorandum, ADL official Justin Finger cited a Center
fund-raising letter that is "replete with factual misstatements and
exaggerations" about anti-Jewish sentiment in the United States and
Europe.4
The 1991 Gulf War provided an ideal opportunity for the Simon
Wiesenthal Center to trot out sensational new propaganda lies.
According to a "shocking revelation" in the Spring 1991 issue of
Response, German firms were producing
Zyklon B gas in Iraq, "the chemical used
by the Germans to murder millions of Jews during the Nazi
Holocaust."5
Iranian prisoners of war, the Center's slick magazine went on, were
being killed with Zyklon B "in gas chambers specially designed for
the Iraqis by the German company Rhema Labortechnik." Recycling a
familiar Second World War propaganda theme, Response continued: "An
eyewitness reported the [Iraqi] gas chambers were tiled to
look like operating rooms, with a separated observation room for each
gas chamber with reinforced glass visibility."
In fanning the flames of what Jewish American historian Alfred
Lilienthal calls "Holocaustomania," the Wiesenthal Center has no
peer. "Rabbi Hier and the Wiesenthal Center are, in my opinion, the
most extreme of those who utilize the Holocaust," said the director
of Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust center in 1988. "The Jewish people
does many vulgar things," he went on, "but the Wiesenthal Center
[has] raised it to a complete level: The optimum use of
sensitive issues in order to raise money ..."6
"The enormous success of the Simon Wiesenthal Center," says author
Judith Miller, "has given new meaning to what was once a macabre
in-house joke ... 'There is no business like Shoah business'."
("Shoah" is Hebrew for Holocaust).7 "It's a sad fact," adds the
Center's chief financial backer, Canadian-Jewish financier Samuel
Belzberg, "that Israel and Jewish education and all the other
familiar buzzwords no longer serve to rally Jews behind the
community. The Holocaust, though, works every time."8
In 1989, for example, the Center pulled in some $15 million in
contributions.9 Marvin Hier is generously compensated for his work.
In 1994 his annual pay was $225,000 (benefits included). At least six
other Center officials were paid more than $100,000 each.10
Originally from New York's Lower East Side, Hier possesses no
academic credentials beyond his yeshiva (rabbinical school)
certification. But he was not ashamed to appoint himself "Dean" of
the Wiesenthal Center and of the Center-affiliated Yeshiva
University.11
Hier has proven to be a tremendous boost to Simon Wiesenthal and his
international image. "Before meeting up with Hier," said one Center
insider, "Simon was nickel and diming it in Vienna. He couldn't even
pay his phone bills."12
A Jewish mission
While the Center makes a feeble pretense of concern for all
humanity, its real agenda is narrowly, even chauvinistically Jewish.
Hier frankly calls his Center a "full-fledged Jewish defense
agency,"13 and Center publications skillfully play to Jewish fears,
concerns and sensitivities.
"... The phenomenal growth of the Wiesenthal Center suggests that the
haunting memory of the Holocaust is, for better or worse, what makes
millions of Jews feel like Jews," says Baltimore Jewish Times editor
Gary Rosenblatt.14
Rival organizations that compete with the Center for money from the
Jewish community privately resent Hier's brash, "anything goes"
tactics.
Hier "has become a self-appointed spokesman for American Jewish
interests," complains Leon Wieseltier, Jewish literary editor of The
New Republic. Hier's linkage of the Holocaust and American politics
has "vulgarized" both, adds Wieseltier. "He and his operation have no
right to desecrate the memory of millions of dead Jews by glibly
associating their memory with the Center's politics."15
"Critics of the Simon Wiesenthal Center," notes Judith Miller in One,
by One, by One, "have also complained about the use of the Holocaust
to justify lobbying for Jewish interests... 'You must do this for the
Jews because there was a Holocaust'."16
Hier and his organization ceaselessly promote Zionist and Israeli
interests. "Another implicit message of the Wiesenthal Center is that
the Holocaust helped to validate the state of Israel," writes Miller.
"Remembering the Holocaust leads to staunch support of Israel."17
Hier has had a particularly close relationship with Israel's
ultra-Zionist Likud party and hard line Israeli Prime Ministers
Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir.18 Although Hier and his Center
demands dauntless pursuit and punishment of "Nazi war criminals,"
Hier hypocritically ignores the well-documented records of Begin and
Shamir as Zionist terrorists.19
No trust for non-Jews
A recurring Wiesenthal Center theme is that non-Jews are never
entirely trustworthy. If "it" could happen in cultured Germany,
Hier's Center never ceases to suggest, "it" can happen anywhere.
Anything less than fawning solicitude for Israeli and Jewish
concerns, the Center implies, all but inevitably leads to shoving
Jews into gas chambers. Hier's "message is that Jews are never safe,
that anti-Semitism is pandemic, occurring everywhere and in various
degrees of virulence," the Los Angeles Times sums up.20
"We're like the baseball hitter who is up to bat with two strikes
against him," says Hier. "That's the proper attitude for Jews. We
shouldn't be going around saying: it cannot happen again ... We
Americans have never been tested."21 Regarding a Wiesenthal Center
exhibit on the Holocaust, the monthly magazine of the American Jewish
Committee remarked: "The message was that Jews have enemies,
murderous enemies, and should look out."22
In Hier's view, the non-Jewish world -- and especially European
Christians -- bears a collective guilt for what the Holocaust lobby
insists is the most terrible crime in history. In a 1995 Los Angeles
Times opinion piece, for example, Hier took aim at Christian leaders
during the Second World War, chastising the "prelates -- from Pope
Pius XII down -- who at best looked the other way, protected their
own, were bystanders rather than activists and sometimes even
assisted the Nazis in carrying out their Final Solution."23
For from promoting "tolerance," says Dr. Frank Knopfelmacher, a
leading Australian Jewish scholar, the Wiesenthal Center actually
foments "ethnic hatred." Australia government officials, added
Knopfelmacher, should have "banned the members of the Simon
Wiesenthal Center from entering Australia and should have deported
those who were here."24
Phenomenal clout
For an organization founded just 16 years ago, the Wiesenthal
Center wields phenomenal political and financial power. "Hier has
accrued unprecedented clout in the Legislature, on Capitol Hill, in
the city's boardrooms and even in Hollywood," noted the Los Angeles
Times Magazine in a 1990 profile article.25
Among the many prominent and wealthy individuals who have given
public support to the Simon Wiesenthal Center have been President
Ronald Reagan, President George Bush, Senator Dianne Feinstein (and
her investment banker husband Richard Blum), entertainers Frank
Sinatra and Elizabeth Taylor, columnist George Will, Mortimer B.
Zuckerman (publisher of US News and World Report and the Atlantic
Monthly), television journalist Barbara Walters, several members of
the moneyed Belzberg family, Alan Greenberg (chairman of the
investment firm of Bear Stearns), and New York financiers Nelson
Peltz, Ronald Perelman and Ivan Boesky. (Boesky, a member of the
Center's board of directors, was later found guilty of large-scale
illegal stock dealing).
"Genocide," an 88-minute Holocaust motion picture coproduced by the
Wiesenthal Center, was awarded the 1982 Academy Award for "Best
Documentary Feature." Accepting the Award was "Dean" Hier, the only
Orthodox rabbi ever to win an Oscar.26 A more recent expression of
the Center's close Hollywood ties is the 1995 HBO made-for-television
motion picture, "The Infiltrator," a highly flattering portrayal of
the Center and its work (in which IHR Director Mark Weber is smeared,
by name, as a "big time fascist").
Political pull and public money
Such is the political clout wielded by the Center that California
lawmakers recently voted to give it a second $5 million grant of
state taxpayers' funds. (The first was in 1985.) This money,
allocated for the Center's "Museum of Tolerance," came from funds
normally reserved for California public schools. Backing this
extraordinary grant were prominent politicians of both parties,
including California Governor Pete Wilson.27
At a time of belt-tightening across the board, the Wiesenthal Center
can count on "special treatment" for state lawmakers. One cautiously
indignant Californian echoed the sentiment of many others in a letter
published in the leading Los Angeles daily newspaper:28
Giving the Wiesenthal Centers another $5 million in state tax dollars when clinics and hospitals are closing, local schools' teaching budgets are being cut and public libraries fight to keep open on even a limited basis is difficult to justify.
Financially strapped education leaders and spokesmen for
hard-pressed public interest groups were understandably outraged.
Responding to Hier's claims of school children visits to his "Museum
of Tolerance," a lobbyist for the California Teachers Association
sarcastically commented: "70,000 kids might go McDonald's every day,
but we don't pick up their lunch tab."
In addition, the Center has received $5 million in federal funds,
through legislation sponsored by California Congressman Henry
Waxman.29
The Center's ties with California Governor Wilson could hardly be
closer. A senior political advisor to Wilson is a member of the
Wiesenthal Center's board of directors. To show its appreciation,
last year the Center awarded Wilson its "National Leadership Award."
Among those attending the award dinner was Michael Fuchs, chairman of
Home Box Office (HBO) and a member of the Wiesenthal Center's board
of directors.30
On at least one occasion, Marvin Hier used his influence to help a
favored politician. In April 1992 he appealed for money on behalf of
Mel Levine, a US Congressman and Democratic candidate for US Senator
from California. In a letter sent out to the Wiesenthal Center
mailing list, Hier attacked Patrick Buchanan and praised Levine for
his unwavering support for Israel and his "sense of history." "Never
Again must be America's slogan," wrote Hier. "And Mel Levine, as US
Senator from California, will be an important force for a farsighted
American foreign policy." (In spite of Hier's appeal, Levine failed
to win the Democratic party nomination for US Senate.)
In 1988 Hier and the Center honored Simon Wiesenthal at two gala
dinners, one in Los Angeles and another in New York City. At the
California gathering, Hier singled out President Reagan for special
commendation, and at the New York dinner, which netted $700,000,
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl delivered the main tribute to
Wiesenthal.31
A Wiesenthal Center "National Tribute Dinner" in November 1989
provided another opportunity to manifest the organization's
wide-ranging influence.32 Speakers included Simon Wiesenthal, Israeli
premier Yitzhak Shamir, and Center Chairman Samuel Belzberg, with
awards to prominent media personalities, including MCA President
Sidney Sheinberg and actor Ben Kingsley.
"Dinner chairman" Robert Maxwell was unable to attend the event, but
the Jewish publishing baron's daughter was on hand to deliver his
passionate speech. (It was only after his mysterious death in October
1991, and a state funeral in Israel, that Maxwell's record as perhaps
the greatest swindler in history came to light. He had stolen at
least $1.65 billion from the public companies he controlled.)
American newspapers and magazines treat the Wiesenthal Center with
uncritical deference, accepting at face value its bogus pretense to
be an impartial source of reliable information. The Los Angeles Times
-- the most influential newspaper in the western United States --
routinely provides space for lengthy "op ed" opinion essays by
Wiesenthal Center spokesmen.
Earlier this year the Center flexed its muscles with a stunning
display of global power. It acted quickly and decisively after a
major Japanese monthly magazine, Marco Polo, published a ten-page
article in its February 1995 issue that presented credible evidence
to show that there were no execution gas chambers in wartime German
concentration camps, and that many other
Holocaust stories are exaggerated or
untrue.33
While recklessly misrepresenting the article's content, the
Wiesenthal Center promptly lashed out at the magazine and its
publisher, and mounted an international boycott campaign to pressure
major international corporations into withdrawing advertising.
Quickly capitulating to the Center's campaign -- which the Institute
for Historical Review called "an arrogant expression of bigotry and
intolerance" -- the publisher took the astonishing step of shutting
down Marco Polo magazine altogether. At a packed news conference in
Tokyo, Wiesenthal Center "Associate Dean" Abraham Cooper accepted a
craven public apology from the publishing company's president.
Attacking the IHR
In many ways, the Institute for Historical Review and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center are antipodal adversaries. Not surprisingly, then,
the Center has hit hard and often at the IHR.
In a frenzied fund-raising letter mailed out in 1985, for example,
the Center cited The Journal of Historical Review as a source of
special concern, warning that a goal of the Journal is to "undermine
the legitimacy of the State of Israel." The letter ominously
added:
We must learn the names and location of all neo-Nazis and revisionist leaders in every state. We must both keep careful records of their activities and expose them to the public.
Wiesenthal Center official Aaron Breitbart castigated the IHR in
an article published in the 1986 Jewish Directory and Almanac. "The
jewel in the crown of revisionism," he wrote, "is the
California-based Institute for Historical Review." Another
widely-distributed Wiesenthal Center fund-raising letter signed by
actor Glenn Ford included a furious and lengthy smear against the IHR
and its Journal.
In a prominently featured "op ed" opinion essay published in April
1995 in a Sunday edition of the Los Angeles Times, Wiesenthal Center
official Abraham Cooper warned:34
With access to the Internet limitless, the scope of hate-group activities is rapidly expanding. The Institute for Historical Review, the leading voice of Holocaust denial in the United States, has set up a site on the World Wide Web portion of the Internet where its literature can be obtained free.
Nearly every issue of the Center's "World Report" magazine, Response (with a claimed 1995 circulation of 320,000) attacks the Institute and leading revisionist scholars. Contrary to the Center's bogus "tolerance," Response frequently gloats about legal repression of Holocaust revisionists in foreign countries. Typical is an article in the Summer 1992 issue, headlined "Holocaust Deniers on the March" and illustrated with a color photograph of French professor Robert Faurisson. Several items in the Winter 1992 issue take aim at the Institute, including one specifically devoted to the IHR's Eleventh Conference. Likewise, a snide and misleading article in the Fall-Winter 1994 Response reported on the Twelfth IHR Conference.
Glitzy 'Museum of Tolerance'
When the Wiesenthal Center opened the doors of its eight-story,
$50 million "Museum of Tolerance" in 1993, American television,
newspapers and magazines responded with an outpouring of flattering
coverage. California Governor Wilson called the Museum a "treasure,"
and Los Angeles City Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky ascribed almost
miraculous powers to it. "If every citizen of Los Angeles...will walk
through the halls of this Museum and heed its lessons," he said,
"then this city will have nothing to worry about."35
The Museum on Pico Boulevard in West Los Angeles -- also called the
Beit Hashoah in Hebrew ("House of the Holocaust") -- draws 350,000
visitors a year, says Hier. This includes more than 70,000 public and
private school children who are taken through the Museum yearly.
"It's almost a second home to public schools," boasts Hier. "We want
to keep them there."36
This is no ordinary museum. A slick, high-tech enterprise that
"marries theme-park glitz with harrowing themes" (Los Angeles Daily
News),37 it presents a relentlessly Judeocentric version of history,
packed with grotesque historical distortions and falsehoods. (A
detailed look at the "Museum of Tolerance" will appear in a
forthcoming Journal issue.)
Conclusion
The phenomenal growth and impact of the Simon Wiesenthal Center is a reflection of the predominant financial-political forces in American society today, and consequently of its prevailing cultural values and historical outlook. It is a barometer of Zionist-Jewish power and influence in the United States, of the hypocrisy and weakness of this country's political leadership, and of the quasi-religious role that the Holocaust story has come to play, not only in America but throughout the world.
Notes
- J. Dart, "L.A. Rabbi's Organization Commands International Attention," Los Angeles Times, March 10, 1990.
- Judith Miller, One, by One, by One: Facing the Holocaust (New York: Simon and Schuster/ Touchstone, 1990), p. 250.
- S. Teitelbaum and T. Waldman, "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, pp. 8, 10.
- Miles Corwin, "Claims About Anti-Semitic Wave Hit by B'nai B'rith," Los Angeles Times, Dec. 12, 1984.
- "German Firms Produce Zyklon B in Iraq," Response: The Wiesenthal Center World Report, Spring 1991, pp. 2, 4.
- David Sinai, "News We Doubt You've Seen," The Jewish Press (Brooklyn, NY), Dec. 23, 1988. Based in part on report in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, Dec. 16, 1988.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One (1990), p. 237.
- S. Teitelbaum and T. Waldman, "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 10.
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 8; Federal tax filings for 1990-91 IRS showed that the Wiesenthal Center annual budget was $11.15 million. Source: Forward (New York City), Nov. 13, 1992, p. 1.
- D. Morain, "Lean Times Don't Imperil Wiesenthal Grant," Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1995.
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 37.
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 10.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One (1990), p. 237.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, p. 251.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, pp. 246, 247.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, p. 248.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, p. 247.
- Says Begin: "Rabbi Hier is one of the foremost spiritual leaders in the United States, and in the entire Jewish world." Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 8.
- On the terrorist backgrounds of Begin and Shamir, see Alfred Lilienthal's study, The Zionist Connection. For more about Shamir's terrorist past, see the sources given in The Journal of Historical Review, July-August 1993, pp. 35, 37 (n. 49).
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 39.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, p. 251.
- Edward Norden, "Yes and No to the Holocaust Museums," Commentary (New York: Am. Jewish Comm.), August 1993, p. 23.
- M. Hier, "Heroes Aren't the Story, Villainy Is," Los Angeles Times, January 19, 1995.
- "Influential Australian Jewish Figure Condemns 'Nazi Hunters' and Simon Wiesenthal Center," IHR Newsletter, April 1991, p. 5. Based on report in The Australian, July 31, 1990.
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 9.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, pp. 236-37.
- D. Morain, "Lean Times Don't Imperil Wiesenthal Grant," Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1995.
- Letter by Richard M. Walden in the Los Angeles Times, July 27, 1995.
- "The Unorthodox Rabbi," Los Angeles Times Magazine, July 15, 1990, p. 9.
- "Lean Times Don't Imperil Wiesenthal Grant," Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1995.
- J. Miller, One, by One, by One, p. 244.
- K. Allman, "Honoring Those Who Remember," Los Angeles Times, Nov. 21, 1989.
- "'No Gas Chambers' Says Influential Japanese Magazine: Jewish-Zionist Boycott Campaign Shuts Down Prominent Monthly," The Journal of Historical Review, March-April 1995, pp. 2-9.
- Abraham Cooper, "Cyberspace Bigots Getting a Free Ride," Los Angeles Times, April 16, 1995.
- "Museum Opens to Critical Acclaim," Response (SWC), Spring 1993, p. 12.
- D. Morain, "Lean Times Don't Imperil Wiesenthal Grant," Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1995.
- Article by Meg Sullivan from the Los Angeles Daily News.
Printed in The Orange County Register, Feb. 7, 1993, p. H 36.
- Elie
Wiesel: A Prominent False Witness
- Revisionism
from the Orient
Joachim Gross interviews Ahmed Rami, the founder of Radio Islam






























