-.0 Opposite page: Top: Refugees gather for a religious service in a DP camp in a scene from "The Long Way Home." of the 1981 film Genocide, which is about the Holocaust and was narrat- ed by Elizabeth Taylor and Orson Welles. He also wrote and co-produced the award-winning Echoes That Remain, a documentary on pre-World War II European Jewish life. Under Rabbi Hier's direction, the Wiesenthal Center has served as con- sultant to Steven Spielberg's epic Schindler's List and ABC Television's miniseries "War and Remembrance." Rabbi Hier hopes to produce one film a year. The next will be available at the end of April. "We are now working on a film about the 50th anniversary of Israel," Rabbi Hier said. "It will be a serious look at Israel. We will show there is a conflict, and we will show both sides. "There are people who are frus- trated because they want peace and want to accelerate the peace process, and there are other citizens of Israel who are more conscious of their secu- rity needs. They say if they can't put their children on a bus, we shouldn't go any further with the peace process." While making The Long Way Home, the production team decided not to go beyond two hours. There was much, including poignant sto- ries, that had to be omitted. Even so, Rabbi Hier believes the footage 0 touches upon issues that go beyond Judaism. "I think it gives the story of refugees and what it means to be left without a country," he said. "We invoke traditional American sympathy toward victims of wars of genocide because our country is really a country of many different refugees of different periods of history. If we all search back to our own ancestors, eventually we will find refugees." 0 0 Middle: From "The Long Way Home": Lobbying for the creation of a Jewish state. Bottom: From "The Long Way Home':• There is no freedom without Jewish freedom. This page: Above: Morgan Freeman is the principal narrator of Moriah Film's "The Long Way Home." For stories on other films Oscar- nominated for Best Documentary Fea- ture, see this week's (At The Movies." Right: Producer Richard Trank, Actor Ed Asner and Writer/Director Mark Jonathan Harris contributed their talents to the project. By looking at how much of the world ignored the plight of these refugees, the filmmakers wanted to offer important lessons for dealing with refugees of Bosnia, Africa and Central America. "There were tremendous surprises as we did our research," said Rabbi Hier, who emphasized the anti- Semitic slurs in General Patton's diary, similar statements by British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin and the anti-Israel position of U.S. Secre- tary of State George Marshall. This film represents the rabbi's continuing effort to attract the atten- tion of youths, who, he believes, might watch a video but not read a book about Jewish issues. "If we want to reach young people and communicate important mes- sages to them, we're going to have to do it in the media of the time," the rabbi said. "It was on Mount Moriah that the Jewish people came into being, so we call our division Moriah Films. Many will deal with the 3,500-year Jewish experience, but we will do many films on human rights issues as we continue to produce documentaries." Rabbi Hier received an Academy Award as co-producer and co-writer The Long Way Home will be shown at the Birmingham Theatre during its second annual "Best of the Academy Film Festival," which runs March 13-22. Check your local listings or call (248) 644- FILM for specific days and times. The Long Way Home also will be screened at the DIA's Detroit Film Theatre 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 6. (313) 833-2323. 3/13 1998 85