Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bitterness Emerges In Anti-Hate Campaigns

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Bitterness Emerges In Anti-Hate Campaigns

    BITTERNESS EMERGES IN ANTI-HATE CAMPAIGNS
    By Stephanie Vosk

    Cape Cod Times
    http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/a rticle?AID=/20080802/NEWS/808020312
    Aug 2 2008
    MA

    MASHPEE -- Her father's fiancee was shot and killed in front of him.

    And her mother was only 11 years old when her parents, siblings,
    and grandmother were deported, joining the 1.5 million victims of
    the Armenian genocide.

    Links Did you know that Armenians live on Cape Cod and enjoy a
    rich history? Take our quiz to learn more about their culture and
    heritage. (Sources: Cape Cod Times archives, www.infoplease.com) That
    history from the era of World War I has became part of Shahkeh Yaylaian
    Setian's psyche, pushing her to delve into the topic in an academic
    way, to better understand the atrocities committed against her family.

    Now, Setian and her supporters are trying to convince Mashpee town
    officials to denounce the No Place for Hate anti-discrimination
    program. Setian believes the program's overseer, the Anti-Defamation
    League, does not fully acknowledge the existence of the Armenian
    genocide.

    "If they consider themselves to be supporters of human rights, then
    they should take a position against anyone or anything that violates
    human rights," said Setian, 75, a retired educator who is currently
    working on a book about Muslims who helped save Armenians during
    the genocide.

    Although there is no exact number known, there are believed to be
    hundreds of Armenians living on the Cape, according to Setian. The
    Mashpee town park plays host to a vigil each year to remember the
    genocide, and a group of Armenians is working to build a church and
    community center near Mashpee High School.

    Setian is also petitioning Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts
    to stop sponsoring Anti-Defamation League programs for the same reason.

    The Anti-Defamation League was founded in 1913 to fight prejudice
    against Jewish people. The group actively fights bigotry and works
    to protect civil rights.

    For years, the league refused to call the mass killings of Armenians
    at the hands of the Turks between 1915 and 1918 a genocide, a position
    it clarified last year.

    The Turkish government maintains that the deaths during and after
    World War I were a result of war, not a targeted ethnic cleansing
    or genocide.

    "We historically have called it massacres and atrocities," said
    Jen Smith, associate regional director for the New England league
    office. "When there was discussion about that language and it became
    something that came to the organization's attention in a profound way,
    we did change our position, and we now refer to that tragic history
    of that period of time as genocide."

    The No Place for Hate program was founded in New England about 10 years
    ago to help cities and towns to promote respect for differences while
    encouraging residents and officials to speak out against intolerance.

    Last summer, the issue heated up in Watertown, home to a large Armenian
    community. Town councilors voted on Aug. 14, 2007, to revoke the
    town's participation in the No Place for Hate program. Several other
    towns soon followed.

    On Aug. 21, 2007, national league director Abraham Foxman issued a
    statement regarding the league's change of heart about the Turkish
    government's actions, saying "that the consequences of those actions
    were indeed tantamount to genocide."

    But in the same statement last summer, Foxman said the league would
    not support a then-pending congressional resolution to officially
    acknowledge the historical event.

    "We continue to firmly believe that a congressional resolution on
    such matters is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster
    reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the
    Turkish Jewish community and the important multilateral relationship
    between Turkey, Israel and the United States," the statement said.

    By describing consequences, however, Setian said the league is saying
    the killings were not intentional, but merely a fallout from civil
    unrest.

    In November, the New England league office sent a letter to No Place
    for Hate communities -- of which there are at least five on the Cape
    -- explaining the national commission's decision to take no further
    position on the issue and urging them to remain in the program.

    But in April, the Massachusetts Municipal Association voted to end
    its sponsorship of the program. It had earlier urged the league to
    further clarify and strengthen statements recognizing the genocide
    and to support the congressional resolution.

    Setian presented her views to the Mashpee Board of Selectmen
    last week. The board referred the issue to the affirmative action
    committee, hoping to hear a recommendation from that group before
    making a decision, Selectman Theresa Cook said.

    The board hopes to reach a decision by September, she said.

    While Mashpee is discussing the idea of getting out of the program,
    Sandwich wants in.

    An initial planning meeting was held in that town in June, and while
    individuals have discussed the Armenian genocide issue, it has not
    been brought to the group yet, said Jacqueline Fields, chairwoman of
    the Barnstable County Human Rights Commission and a Sandwich resident.

    "Whatever the statement was -- denying it or ignoring it or qualifying
    it as something other than a genocide or a holocaust -- is not a
    position that I would support," Fields said of the Anti-Defamation
    League's original stance. "However, it is not a reason for individuals
    to withdraw from No Place for Hate."
Working...
X