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Paul Hyer

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Paul Van Hyer (born 2 June 1926)[1] is an emeritus professor of Chinese History at Brigham Young University (BYU) and the founder of the Asian Studies Program at that institution.

Hyer was born in Ogden, Utah. During World War II Hyer served in the United States military in the Pacific Theatre.[2] As a young man Hyer served as an LDS missionary in the Japanese mission located in Hawaii from 1946-1948. While in Hawaii Hyer set up a system to train missionaries in the Japanese language in an organized manner.[3]

Hyer received his BA in history from BYU in 1951, followed by an MA in Asian history and Asian Social Institutions from the University of California, Berkeley in 1953 and a Ph.D. in Asian History, also from UC Berkeley, in 1961.

Hyer wrote the book A Mongolian Living Buddha which was a biography of Kanjurwa Khutughtu along with Sechin Jagchid.[4] Hyer also wrote Mongolia's Culture and Society with Sechin.[5]

Besides his long period as a professor at BYU, Hyer also taught for three years in China.[6] Hyer has also had published several articles on the history of Inner Mongolia within the People's Republic of China as well as on Japanese-Tibetan relations and Lamanist Buddhism in Japan. He also contributed an article on the prospects for the LDS Church in Asia to the first volume of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought.

From 1982-1985 Hyer served as president of the LDS Taiwan Taipei Mission. From 1988-1990 he served as president of the Taipei Taiwan Temple. During the time between these two positions in Taiwan Hyer served as bishop of a BYU ward. Later Hyer was involved in the negotiations leading to the LDS Church getting recognition in Mongolia.[7]

Hyer and first wife, Harriett Johns Hyer, had 8 children. Harriet died on 2 July 1990 while she was serving as matron of the Taiwan Taipei Temple.[8] He was remarried to Karen Emily Claus, also a professor at BYU teaching Business Ethics and Public Administration at the Marriott School of Management. They were married at the Salt Lake Temple on March 27, 1991 by Marion "Duff" Hanks, Paul's WWII companion and long time friend.

In 1993 Elder Neal A. Maxwell in a speech given at BYU mentioned that Paul Hyer and his wife would soon go to teach at a university in Beijing.[9]


Karen Hyer, a Republican, is running for United States Congress in 2010 representing Utah's 3rd District on the Democratic ticket.

Notes

  1. ^ this is based on posted genealogy. The BYU Library collection, at least in one form says that Paul Hyer was born in 1914. This is the same file that says Living Buddha is unpublished, so the file clearly has problems. The 1988 Deseret News article on Hyer's call as Temple President states his age as 62, which agrees with the 1926 birthdate. Since the BYU basically is of work that was collaborations between Hyer and Senchin, it may be the latter who was born in 1914
  2. ^ intro bio on Hyer for his article on Mongolian in China in William Adrian Veenhovern, et. al, Case Studies on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms: A World Survey
  3. ^ Conference at BYU on the occasion of the centennial of the LDS Church in Japan
  4. ^ Hyer, Paul and Sechid Jagchid. A Mongolian Living Buddha: biography of the Kanjurwa Khutughtu (Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 1983) info from google books copy of book
  5. ^ article on inner Mongolia by Sechin listing other works by him
  6. ^ Article posted by USC on Religion in China at the time of the 2008 Olympics
  7. ^ LDS Church News, 6 October, 2007
  8. ^ LDS Church News, July 14, 1990
  9. ^ text of Speech by Elder Maxwell

Sources