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Los Angeles Rabbi Marvin Hier Speaks at Inauguration

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LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Rabbi Marvin Hier, the founder and dean of the Westside-based Simon Wiesenthal Center and the Museum of Tolerance, among six other religious leaders, provided a brief reading for Friday's presidential inauguration.

Hier told City News Service he chose themes from the Torah and Talmud "that resonate in the 21st century."

The "general trend" of his reading "is drawn from an idea in the Psalms when the Psalm says `The heavens belong to God but the Earth belongs to man,"' Hier said.

"The concept there is human beings ... don't get to receive Social Security at birth because they haven't achieved anything. They don't deserve it. The themes is human beings are God's partner. When the partner does his share, things are great on our planet.

When the partner fails and does nothing, that reflects what happens here on Earth. It's not God's business to make the Earth great, it's man's business."

Hier said he was called by an official of the Presidential Inaugural Committee and told him he would be honored to speak at the inauguration.

Rabbi Marvin Hier
Simon Wiesenthal Center Dean and Founder Rabbi Marvin Hier presents onstage at the Anti-Defamation League's 2015 Entertainment Industry Dinner at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on April 20, 2015 in Beverly Hills, California.  | Photo: Michael Kovac / Contributor

Hier's participation in the inauguration of Donald Trump was announced by the committee on Dec. 28 and five days later, an anti-Trump petition on the website Change.org was started asking that Hier withdraw. The petition was later revised by its author, Mya Stark, the executive director of the nonprofit organization Los Angeles Makerspace, "to be more respectful."

Signers are asked "to register their difference of opinion on routes to what is most certainly a shared goal: to defend the American dream that we can live freely, equally and in harmony with each other."

The petition expresses concerns that Hier's participation in the inauguration "helps to `normalize' the dangerous and hate-fueled Trump administration" and "by speaking at his inauguration, especially as a hero of a half-century battling hate and intolerance, we feel you lend those elements of your `brand' -- if inadvertently -- to help create a smokescreen for Trump, implying that he should be let back into the fold of human discourse WITHOUT having to overtly distance himself from avowed bigots and speak out against them."

The petition received 3,255 signatures as of Friday morning.

Hier said he has received "hundreds of emails and calls from all over the country pleading with me to continue and not to listen to these petitions."

"I didn't weigh in on both sides of that argument because I made the decision immediately when I was called and I stand by it," Hier said. "I would have done it if it was a Democratic nominee. It's my duty as an American to do it."

Other religious leaders set to speak at the inauguration include Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Roman Catholic archbishop of New York, and the Rev. Franklin Graham, the president and CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, founded by his father, the Rev. Billy Graham, and the international Christian relief and evangelism organization Samaritan's Purse.

The others are the Rev. Samuel Rodriguez of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, Pastor Paula White of New Destiny Christian Center and Bishop Wayne T. Jackson of Great Faith Ministries International.

Hier called it "a great privilege" to speak at the inauguration.

"My parents escaped in the '20s from Poland where the climate for Jews was one of hostility and prejudice," Hier said. "They came to this country where Judaism flourishes. Today in the United States of America, the Jewish community is the most vibrant Jewish community probably in the Diaspora in 2,000 years.

You have secular Jews, Jews who are atheists, Reform Jews, Conservative Jews, Hasidic Jews, Modern Orthodox Jews and every one of them is allowed to thrive in this country. When you're called to participate in the inauguration of a president of the greatest democracy, there's only one answer - - yes."

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