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JCRC Joins Battle For Genocide Recognition

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  • JCRC Joins Battle For Genocide Recognition

    JCRC JOINS BATTLE FOR GENOCIDE RECOGNITION
    By Ted Siefer - Thursday April 27 2006

    Jewish Advocate , MA
    April 27 2006

    Massachusetts Attorney General Tom ReillyLocal Jewish groups back
    teaching the Armenian genocide in public schools

    The Jewish Community Relations Council has firmly allied itself with
    the Armenian community in its fight against a lawsuit challenging the
    way the Armenian genocide is taught in Massachusetts public schools.

    Coinciding with the anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide
    in 1915, a rally organized by kNOw Genocide, a coalition of several
    cultural and religious groups, including JCRC, was held last week
    in front of the State House. Among the speakers at the event were
    Lt. Governor Kerry Healy and Attorney General Tom Reilly, both
    gubernatorial candidates, and Congressman Ed Markey.

    "We have to defend the right of the Department of Education to teach
    what happened to the Armenians. This is not about free speech. It's
    about facing truth," Reilly told the crowd. The attorney general's
    office is defending the Department of Education in the lawsuit brought
    by the Assembly of Turkish American Associations.

    About 1.5 million Armenians were killed during World War I by Turkish
    forces; Turkey has long contended that the deaths were the unintended
    consequences of war, not a deliberate campaign against Armenians.

    The Turkish association's lawsuit charges the Department of Education
    with violating academic freedom and free speech by removing from its
    curriculum guide materials that presented the Turkish point of view
    on the genocide.

    Lawyer and academic freedom advocate Harvey Silverglate is representing
    the Turkish Association. "I believe that in the long run the
    Jewish organizations, as well as the Armenian organizations and all
    other organizations currently on the 'censor the contra-genocide
    views' bandwagon, will be sorry that they have contributed to
    the institutionalization of ethnic group censorship in matters of
    education," he said.

    JCRC Executive Director Nancy Kaufman rejected this argument. "I
    think it's bogus. Does this mean we should let the KKK teach in
    schools because they want to share their view of slavery?" she said.

    "What if someone had wanted to make room for a Holocaust denier in a
    textbook? We in the Jewish community have to be sensitive to genocide,
    whether the Rwandan, Jewish or right now in Sudan."

    This point was emphasized by speakers at last week's rally, which
    prompted a contingent of pro-Palestinian activists to shout: "Stop
    the Zionist invasion of Sudan."

    The Armenian genocide is widely recognized by scholars. Last year,
    the International Association of Genocide Scholars sent a letter to
    the Turkish president urging the country to reexamine its version of
    the catastrophe.

    A bill introduced earlier this month in the House (H.R. 193) and Senate
    (S. 164) would include language recognizing the Armenian genocide
    as part of a commemoration of the 15th anniversary of the U.S.'s
    adoption of the Genocide Convention. The U.S. does not officially
    recognize the Armenian genocide.

    A documentary titled "The Armenian Genocide," narrated by Julianna
    Margulies, was screened on Capitol Hill shortly before the bills were
    introduced. The documentary aired on PBS this month.

    There are many significant connections between the Armenian genocide
    and the Holocaust, according to Adam Strom. His organization, Facing
    History and Ourselves, provides curriculum materials for teaching
    about historical atrocities, including the Armenian genocide.

    Strom pointed out that Hitler cited the world's indifference to the
    Armenian genocide as he laid the groundwork for the Holocaust.

    "Hitler said: 'Who today still speaks of the massacre of the
    Armenians?'" Strom noted.

    Jews have long played an important role in calling for recognition of
    the atrocity and justice for its victims, Strom said. He pointed to the
    role of Rafael Lemkin, who defined the term "genocide" in a treatise
    on the subject that would become a cornerstone of human rights law.

    "He lobbied for years to find a way to outlaw what happened to the
    Armenians. He asked his law professor, 'Why can't they put these guys
    on trial, why is it not against the law to murder a million people
    but it is to kill just one?'" said Strom.

    Strom also pointed to the role of Henry Morgenthau, the Jewish U.S.

    ambassador to Turkey during World War I who railed against the
    anti-Armenian campaign.

    Morgenthau is revered in Armenia, according to David Sacks, a Boston
    doctor who helped set up a women's clinic in the newly independent
    republic in the 1990s.

    Sacks said that in his time spent in Armenia, he found many qualities
    of the people familiar. "Their love of family and culture ... reminded
    me of our people," he said.

    "We need to honor their pain and suffering and we need to remind the
    world that there was more than one Holocaust," Sacks added.

    http://www.thejewishadvocate.com/this_week s_issue/news/?content_id=1179
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