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Rabbi Marc Schneier
Rabbi Marc Schneier is a leading personality
and spokesperson for the Jewish community. The Forward, in its annual
survey of Jewish leaders, named Rabbi Schneier as one of the 50 most prominent
Jews in the United States, and Newsweek Magazine listed him as one of
America's top 50 rabbis. As one of the leading voices in the field of
intergroup and race relations, reconciliation and understanding, he is
at the forefront of strengthening ties among the Jewish, African-American,
Latino and Asian-American ethnic communities, as well as promoting dialogue
and cooperation among the Jewish, Muslim, and Christian faith communities.
Rabbi Schneier has been honored by the United States Congress and the
State of Israel as an advocate for human and civil rights and religious
and ethnic tolerance. Rabbi Schneier is President and Founder of The Foundation for Ethnic Understanding (FFEU) and serves as Chairman of the World Jewish Congress American Section, as well as its Commission on Intergroup Relations. He is the past President of the North American Board of Rabbis, a federation of presidents and past presidents of rabbinical boards from more than 50 major cities across the United States and Canada, and is past president of the New York Board of Rabbi's, the world's largest interdenominational rabbinic body representing the Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionist movements. Rabbi Schneier is founding rabbi of The Hampton Synagogue in Westhampton Beach, and The New York Synagogue in Manhattan. He serves on myriad boards and executive committees, including the Drum Major Institute, Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations and The Jewish National Fund. In January 2000, Rabbi Schneier's book
SHARED DREAMS was published, documenting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s
relationship with the Jewish Community, which, along with the FFEU's companion
student guide program, tells the tale of Black and Jewish cooperation
in the civil rights era to more than 12,000 students in more than 500
high schools, Hillel houses and historically Black colleges across America.
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