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Aryeh Neier - Wikipedia

Aryeh Neier - Wikipedia

Aryeh Neier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aryeh Neier
Neier in 2013
BornApril 22, 1937 (age 89)
EducationCornell University (BS)
SpouseYvette Celton
Children1

Aryeh Neier (born April 22, 1937)[1] is an American human rights activist who co-founded Human Rights Watch,[2] served as the inaugural president of George Soros's Open Society Institute philanthropy network from 1993 to 2012,[3] directed the New York Civil Liberties Union from 1964 to 1970,[4] and served as the national executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union from 1970 to 1978.

Early life and education

Neier was born into a German Jewish family in Berlin, then in Nazi Germany.[5] He was the son of Wolf (a teacher) and Gitla (Bendzinska) Neier. His family fled the country in 1939, when he was two years old.[6] He graduated from Cornell University with highest honors in 1961.[citation needed]

Career

He served as an adjunct professor of law at New York University.[7]

Neier served as a director for the League for Industrial Democracy and was involved in the renaming of its student division to form the group Students for a Democratic Society in 1960.[8][9][10]

Neier was hired by the ACLU in 1963 and became the organization's executive director in 1970; in this role, he helped grow the organization's membership from 140,000 to 200,000. He led the ACLU's efforts to protect the civil rights of prisoners and those in mental hospitals, fought for the abolition of the death penalty and to make abortions available to those who need them.[6]

Neier was criticized for his decision to have the ACLU support the National Socialist Party of America, a Neo-Nazi group, in its efforts to march in Skokie, Illinois, in the case National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie, despite the presence in Skokie of large numbers of Jews and Holocaust survivors. The ACLU's representation of the group resulted in 30,000 members who ended their ACLU membership.[6] In his 1979 book, Defending My Enemy: American Nazis in Skokie, Illinois, and the Risks of Freedom, Neier defended his actions in support of the Skokie march, arguing that Jews are best protected by ensuring that the rule of law allowing minorities to speak out is afforded to all groups.[11]

At a party in Washington, D.C. in early 1976, an attendee from New York indicated that he would not vote for Jimmy Carter for president because of his Southern accent, to which Charles Morgan, Jr., the ACLU's legislative director, replied "That's bigotry, and that makes you a bigot." Neier reprimanded Morgan, criticizing him for taking a public position on a candidate for public office.[12] Morgan resigned from his post in April 1976, citing efforts by the bureaucracy at the ACLU to restrict his public statements.[13]

In 1978 he was among the founders of Helsinki Watch, which was renamed Human Rights Watch in 1988.[14] Neier has led investigations of human rights abuses around the world, participating in the creation of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. He has contributed articles and opinion pieces to newspapers, magazines and journals including The New York Review of BooksThe New York Times Book Review and Foreign Policy.[7]

He has taught a course called "Promoting Human Rights: History, Law, Methods and Current Controversies" at the Paris School of International AffairsSciences Po, in Paris.[citation needed]

In June 2024 Neier penned an article for The New York Review of Books in which he documented why he had come to the determination that Israel was committing the crime of genocide in Gaza.[15]

Neier's 1979 book, Defending My Enemy: America Nazis in Skokie, Illinois, and the Risks of Freedom, is due to be republished in September 2025 with a new essay updating free speech developments over the last 50 years.[16][needs update]

Books

  • Dossier: The Secret Files They Keep on You (1974)
  • Crime and Punishment: A Radical Solution (1976)
  • Defending My Enemy: American Nazis in Skokie, Illinois, and the Risks of Freedom (1979)[11]
  • Only Judgment: The Limits of Litigation in Social Change (1982)
  • War Crimes: Brutality, Terror, and the Struggle for Justice (1998)
  • Taking Liberties: Four Decades in the Struggle for Rights (2003)[17]
  • The International Human Rights Movement (2012)

References

  1.  Neier, Aryeh 1937- encyclopedia.com
  2.  "A Talk by Aryeh Neier, Co-Founder of Human Rights Watch, President of the Open Society Foundations"Harvard University. 16 April 2012. Archived from the original on 26 May 2018. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  3.  "Aryeh Neier:President Emeritus"Open Society Foundations. Archived from the original on 2013-01-13. Retrieved 2015-05-25.
  4.  "Uncivil Liberties"Claremont Review of Books. Retrieved 2025-02-27.
  5.  Peck, Abraham J. The German-Jewish Legacy in America, 1938-1988: From Bildung to the Bill of Rights. Wayne State UP, 1989 p.117
  6.  Goldstein, Tom. "Neier Is Quitting Post at A.C.L.U.; He Denies Link to Defense of Nazis; Scope of Work Widened"The New York Times, April 18, 1978. Accessed January 13, 2009.
  7.  "Aryeh Neier"United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  8.  "The Rise and Fall of the Nation's Largest Student Movement: the Students for Democratic Society"The Huffington Post. May 19, 2014.
  9.  "The Charity Guy"The New Yorker. November 24, 2010.
  10.  Neier, Aryeh (2003). Taking Liberties: Four Decades in the Struggle for Rights. Cambridge, MA: Public Affairs/Perseus Books. pp. Introduction:xx. ISBN 1586482912As director of LID, I decided to try to invigorate its student division. One step in that direction was to rename it.
  11.  Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher"Books of The Times; Questions Confronted"The New York Times, February 20, 1979. Accessed January 13, 2009.
  12.  Reed, Roy. "Charles Morgan Jr., 78, Dies; Leading Civil Rights Lawyer"The New York Times, January 9, 2009. Accessed January 12, 2009.
  13.  Illson, Murray. "Washington Chief of A.C.L.U. Resigns; Charles Morgan Jr. Charges Superiors Tried to Restrict His Public Statements"The New York Times, April 10, 1976. Accessed January 12, 2009.
  14.  "Aryeh Neier". Quellen zur Geschichte der Menschenrechte. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  15.  Neier, Aryeh (2024-06-06). "Is Israel Committing Genocide?"The New York Review of Books. Vol. 71, no. 10. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved 2025-02-27.
  16.  "Defending My Enemy by Aryeh Neier | Waterstones"www.waterstones.com. Retrieved 2025-02-27.
  17.  Fidell, Eugene R. "The Rights Stuff "The New York Times, May 11, 2003. Accessed January 13, 2009.


NYRB 
Is Israel Committing Genocide?
Aryeh Neier June 6, 2024 issue

I have been engaged for six decades in the human rights movement, which has endeavored to restore peace by enforcing International Humanitarian Law. Can the law bring a measure of justice to the victims of Israel’s and Hamas’s violence?

Like most of my colleagues in the international human rights movement, I use the term “genocide” sparingly. During my fifteen-year tenure at Human Rights Watch (HRW), which I cofounded in 1978, I applied the term to only one of the many great crimes that we monitored: Saddam Hussein’s slaughter of the Iraqi Kurds in 1988.

The Kurds had suffered severe abuses under Saddam’s dictatorship, and during the Iran–Iraq War of 1980–1988 they rebelled. In response Saddam used chemical weapons against them, as he had against Iranian forces. A particularly large attack took place in March 1988 against the Kurdish city of Halabja, killing about five thousand people. Then, over the following six months, Saddam’s forces rounded up Kurdish men and boys from northern Iraq and bused them to a desert area where bulldozers had dug trenches in the sand. Thousands of victims were forced into the trenches, machine-gunned, and buried.

At HRW, it took us more than two years to discover the desert killings and burials. One person who provided crucial information was a twelve-year-old boy named Taymour Abdullah Ahmad who had climbed out of a trench with a bullet in his back. A Bedouin family found him as he crossed the desert, and they nursed him to health. Two years later Ahmad made his way back to the Kurdish region of Iraq, where we were able to get his story. We subsequently found a few other survivors.

Taymour Abdullah Ahmad displaying his bullet wounds
Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos

Taymour Abdullah Ahmad, the boy who provided Human Rights Watch with information about violence committed by Saddam Hussein’s forces, displaying his bullet wounds, Kurdistan, Iraq, 1991

Iraqi forces had destroyed a dozen towns and as many as four thousand villages, looted property and farm animals on a vast scale, and imprisoned tens of thousands of women, children, and elderly people under dire conditions. Iraqi intelligence had been trained by East Germany’s Stasi, and the regime kept detailed records of its actions throughout the war. In a few cities, Kurdish forces overran Iraqi security offices and captured many of these records. At HRW, we were able to have fourteen tons of them flown to the United States, and we translated them from Arabic to obtain a full picture of the crimes against the Kurds that we came to call a genocide.

New York Review in various formats

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https://archive.org/details/defendingmyenemy0000neie/page/n5/mode/2up

Defending My Enemy: American Nazis, the Skokie Case, and the Risks of Freedom Paperback – August 31, 2012
by Aryeh Neier (Author)

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (9)
4.3 on Goodreads
35 ratings

Are Nazis entitled to freedom of expression? In 1977, Frank Collin, leader of the National Socialist Party of America, sought to hold a Nazi march in Skokie, Illinois. Skokie had one of the largest Holocaust survivor populations outside New York City. In this Chicago suburb, over half the population was Jewish. The proposed march sparked a host of legal actions: the Village of Skokie asked for an injunction to prevent the Nazis from marching, and new ordinances were adopted to do so; Collin applied to hold a march on a later date, but was denied; an ACLU lawsuit was brought in federal court, seeking to invalidate the new ordinances Skokie had put in place to prevent the march. In the end, Collin and the Nazis did not march in Skokie, but the Illinois Supreme Court ruled for free speech in 1978. 

The ACLU felt severe consequences, organizational and financial, of what was seen by many members as an insidious, pro-Fascist position. Writing from his perspective as national executive director of the ACLU, Aryeh Neier tells the story, and ponders the consequences, of Skokie and other cases in which the enemies of freedom have claimed for themselves the rights that they would deny to others.
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182 pages

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From the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2016
    As a doctoral student who studies free speech and First Amendment issues, I was very much looking forward to reading Arden Neier's "Defending my Enemy." However, after reading through the book, there was a feeling of disappointment. While Neier does a phenomenal job discussing the events surrounding the Skokie case and its aftermath, the book seems to be lacking in the area of WHY, exactly, it is important to defend one's enemy. Neier begins the book by making note that one of his objectives in writing is to convince the reader that it is essential to defend the rights of our enemies in order to protect our own rights. However, this argument is not fully articulated in the book.

    Overall, this book does an excellent job discussing the historical context of the Skokie case and its impact. Neier, writing from his exclusive perspective as national director of the ACLU during the time, provides insights that are not well known. However, people wanting a highly-charged, persuasive, irrefutable defense of free speech will likely be somewhat let down.
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2017
    A classic book and fantastic story on principled freedom of speech, even for those we most detest.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2018
    Important read about the importance of free speech for all.
    One person found this helpful
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