Lerman was born as Szmuel Milek Lerman in Tomaszów Lubelski, Poland, in 1920.[1] His parents were Israel and Yochevet Feldzon Lerman and he was one of five children.[1] His mother, Yochevet, owned an import and exportgrocery business.[1] His father, Israel, owned several businesses throughout eastern Poland, including several flour mills in Eastern Poland and wholesale liquor and gasoline businesses.[1][2]
He went to the Polish city of Łódź following the end of the war.[1] There he met his wife, Krysia Rozalia Laks, whom he married in a Displaced Persons camp.[1] The couple emigrated together to the United States in 1947.[1]
Lerman, who became chairman of the Campaign to Remember, and the committee managed to raise $190 million in order to construct and endow the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.[1] He also served simultaneously as the chairman of the future museum's International Relations Committee, which was charged with negotiating with Eastern European nations in order to obtain artifacts focusing on Jewish life and the Holocaust for the museum's permanent collection.[1] Lerman's IR Committee managed to obtain a number of important artifacts, including actual barracks from the Birkenau concentration camp, a railroadboxcar used to transport Jewish prisoners to Treblinka, over 5,000 shoes from Majdanek and various toothbrushes, suitcases and other personal items from Auschwitz.[1]
Lerman served as chairman of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's governing board from the time of its opening on April 22, 1993, until he left the museum in 2000.[1] Additionally, Lerman helped to found the museum's Committee on Conscience, which works to draw attention to contemporary genocide issues, such as the current Darfur crisis.[1]
Lerman, who spoke several languages, returned to his native Poland following his departure from the museum in 2000.[1] There he campaigned for a proper memorial for his family members (both his parents perished in Belzec), as well as the other estimated 500,000 Jews who died at the Belzec extermination camp.[1] The existing Communist era memorial, which stood in a former garbage dump, made no mention of Jewish Holocaust victims.[1] Lerman raised approximately 5 million dollars to build a new memorial by teaming up with the Polish government and the American Jewish Committee.[1]
Miles Lerman spoke at the dedication of the new Belzec memorial, which was held on June 3, 2004, telling the story of 9 year old Deborah Katz, one of the death camp's estimated 500,000 to 600,000 victims.[4][5]
He was survived by his wife, Chris, whose real name is Krysia Rozalia Laks, his daughter, philanthropist Jeanette Lerman-Neubauer; his son David and his brother, Jona.[1]