Henry Jarecki

Entrepreneur

Birthday April 15, 1933

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Stettin, Nazi Germany (now Szczecin, Poland)

Age 90 years old

Nationality Poland

#13894 Most Popular

1913

Mocatta & Goldsmid had previously been involved with stabilization of the markets under similar circumstances, such as the 1913 rescue of the Indian Specie Bank.

During his involvement with the Mocatta Group, Jarecki served as a director of the Futures Industry Association, the National Futures Association, COMEX, the Chicago Board of Trade, and the Chicago Metals board of trade, and was an adviser to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the years following its establishment.

Jarecki was also the founder of a number of other business ventures, notably Brody, White & Co., a brokerage firm that is now a part of Newedge Group.

1933

Henry George Jarecki (born April 15, 1933) is a German-born American academic, psychiatrist, entrepreneur, producer and philanthropist.

Henry Jarecki was born into a German-Jewish family in Stettin (now Szczecin in northwestern Poland), the son of Max Jarecki, a physician, and Gerda Kunstmann, the scion of a shipping family.

As a child, he fled Nazi Germany with his family for the United Kingdom and subsequently the United States.

His wealthy family was able to transfer their wealth from occupied Poland.

1957

Jarecki graduated from the Medical Faculty at Heidelberg University in 1957, and subsequently spent more than a decade as an academic, teaching at the Yale Medical School, and as a psychiatrist in private practice in New Haven, Connecticut, and at the Yale-New Haven Hospital.

Jarecki remains an adjunct professor at Yale.

1967

In 1967, Jarecki became involved with the London bullion house, Mocatta & Goldsmid, Ltd. In 1969, he established the American counterpart to Mocatta & Goldsmid, known as Mocatta Metals Corporation.

1971

With Dr. Thomas Detre, Jarecki was the author of Modern Psychiatric Treatment, a 733-page study of psychopharmacologic and other therapies published in 1971.

As an academic, he was author or co-author of a number of articles in the psychiatric field, about psychopharmacology, psychiatric units in general hospitals, combined amitriptyline/phenelzine poisoning, and drug addiction.

1978

In 1978, Jarecki sought to buy the former Stuyvesant Fish mansion at 19 Gramercy Park South in Manhattan, New York City, but was outbid.

1980

In partnership initially with Hambros Bank and subsequently with Standard Chartered Bank, Jarecki managed the Mocatta Group until he sold his shares in the late 1980s.

Jarecki's activity in the bullion market was as a dealer in precious metals and in options.

He was active when Mocatta became a counterparty to the Hunt Brothers in the Hunts' attempted silver corner of 1980.

Jarecki pioneered the use of computers to trade the commodities markets and Mocatta was among the first firms to offer over-the-counter and exchange-traded options on futures in the American commodity markets when the options were introduced in the early 1980s.

1999

After leaving Mocatta, Jarecki was the Chairman and lead investor in the movie information and ticketing company Moviefone, which was sold to AOL in 1999.

More recently, he has helped the City of Heidelberg, Germany to develop a campus in Bahnstadt for young research-based companies, and has established PsychoGenics, a psycho- and neuro-pharmaceutical contract research and drug discovery company in Paramus, New Jersey.

2000

When the property – which has more than 37 rooms on six floors for over 18,000 square feet (1,700 m2) of living space – became available again in 2000, he was able to purchase it, with plans to use it as both a home and the headquarters of the family foundation, the Timber Falls Foundation.

2002

He is Chairman Emeritus of the Scholar Rescue Fund, which he founded in 2002, and is Chairman of the Scholar Rescue Fund's efforts in Germany.

With Daniela Kaisth, he has written a book entitled Scholar Rescue in the Modern World.

Jarecki is a leading advocate in Germany and the United States for refugees, calling for an alternative narrative on refugees, and stating, "Giess Wasser zur Suppe und heiss alle willkommen," ("Add water to the soup and make everyone welcome").

In partnership with the Government of the state of Baden-Wurttemberg and private foundations, Jarecki has led an effort to provide endangered scholars with sanctuary and the opportunity to re-build their careers at universities in Germany.

His work in this field has been recorded in the United States’ Congressional Record.

2004

Henry Jarecki has also been a motion pictures and theater producer, with credits including Gardeners of Eden (2004), Cuba: Island of Music (2005), Ain't Supposed to Die a Natural Death (2007), The Third Wave (2008), Tyson (2009), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (2009), and A Streetcar Named Desire (2012).

In 2004, he co-founded the Gloria and Henry Jarecki School in Ratanakiri, Cambodia.

Previously, he served as a trustee of the American Museum of Natural History, the Classical Theatre of Harlem,.and the Harlem School of the Arts.

Jarecki has been a member of the Advisory Council at the Department of German at Princeton University and of the Department of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine.

He presently serves as a Governor of H. Lavity Stoutt Community College in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, as a trustee of the Island Resources Foundation, and founded the British Virgin Islands' first youth center, the Youth Empowerment Project, in Tortola.

Jarecki and his family have been donors to his alma mater, the University of Heidelberg, and to the City of Heidelberg, refurbishing the university's Anatomy Department, and donating a playground to Heidelberg's Emmertsgrund, a district in which many refugee and immigrant families reside.

2005

Jarecki also makes an appearance as himself in the Melvin Van Peebles biopic, How to Eat Your Watermelon in White Company (And Enjoy It) (2005).

Jarecki serves as Vice-Chairman of the Institute of International Education (IIE).

2013

Dr. Jarecki has been a member of the Heidelberg University Association's Advisory Board in New York since 2013.

Jarecki is the husband of Gloria Jarecki, formerly a film critic at Time magazine.

Together, they "were nominated for the Travel Industry of America's Hall of Leaders for their environmental work in ecotourism on Guana Island."

He is the father of four sons; the finance executive Thomas A. Jarecki, and the filmmakers Andrew Jarecki, Eugene Jarecki and Nicholas Jarecki.

He is the brother of Dr. Richard W. Jarecki, also a physician and formerly on the faculty of the University of Heidelberg, who is noted for the development of statistical analysis of gambling facilities.

Jarecki has a home in Rye, New York and is also a part-time resident of the British Virgin Islands, where he owns two islands within the archipelago: Norman Island and Guana Island, both in the British Virgin Islands.

Jarecki was made an honorary Belonger of the BVI.