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Pressure Mounting On ADL Program: Armenian Groups Expand Initiative

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  • Pressure Mounting On ADL Program: Armenian Groups Expand Initiative

    PRESSURE MOUNTING ON ADL PROGRAM ARMENIAN GROUPS EXPAND INITIATIVE
    By Keith O'Brien, Globe Staff

    Boston Globe, MA
    Aug 16 2007

    Less than 24 hours after Watertown pulled out of a popular antibigotry
    program, national Armenian leaders prepared yesterday to target the
    No Place For Hate program elsewhere unless the program's sponsor,
    the Anti-Defamation League, is willing to acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide.

    Some residents of nearby Arlington have already begun mobilizing to end
    their town's involvement in the No Place For Hate program, launched
    there just two months ago. Two politicians -- state Representative
    Rachel Kaprielian, a Watertown Democrat, and Watertown Councilor
    Marilyn Petitto Devaney -- vowed to lobby local communities that have
    the program and send a message that other towns, not just Watertown,
    oppose the ADL's position.

    "The Armenian community is completely up in arms about it," said
    Hilda Silverman, an Arlington resident who hopes to put the issue
    before town officials soon. "There's just massive mobilization,
    and the ADL's position is indefensible, I think. What can they
    say? They can change. They can say it's a genocide. Otherwise, it's
    all gobbledygook."

    The controversy over No Place For Hate, a national program that had
    encountered no controversy until now, centers on what critics say is
    the ADL's refusal to acknowledge the genocide. While saying that mass
    killings took place in the last century, the ADL's leadership has
    said it has no position on pending federal legislation to recognize
    the Armenian genocide.

    >From 1915 to 1923, Ottoman Turks massacred as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians in what is now modern-day Turkey. Armenians, historians,
    and some European nations recognized the killings as genocide. The
    Turkish government has refused to accept the genocide label, and
    the ADL's national director, Abraham H. Foxman, has also infuriated
    Armenian-Americans for refusing to call it a genocide.

    When asked in a Globe interview last month if he believed what happened
    to the Armenians was genocide, Foxman replied, "I don't know." Critics
    have seized on the remark as suggesting the issue is open to debate,
    and some have called it genocide denial.

    ADL regional and national leaders, including Foxman, did not return
    calls yesterday seeking comment on Watertown's decision to end the
    No Place For Hate program and whether it would affect the program
    elsewhere. But in a brief, written statement, Foxman said, "We
    believe that the No Place For Hate program will continue and stand
    on its merits."

    Regional ADL leadership made public a letter drafted yesterday to
    Watertown's council president, Clyde L. Younger.

    "We are deeply saddened by the council's action last night adopting a
    proclamation calling for the town to withdraw from the Anti-Defamation
    League's No Place For Hate program," the ADL's New England regional
    director, Andrew H. Tarsy, and regional board chairman, James Rudolph,
    said in the letter. "As a result, Watertown will lose a valued resource
    for your community in promoting diversity and cultural harmony."

    The ADL initially formed in 1913 to fight anti-Semitism. But over the
    years it has become a prominent human rights group that has spoken out
    on issues from ethnic cleansing in the Balkans to genocide in Darfur,
    and in 1999 it launched the No Place For Hate program.

    Under the program, communities organize diversity days and other events
    focused on challenging bigotry, and after a year they receive placards
    to be posted in public, declaring the community as "No Place For Hate."

    Armenian and political leaders agree that the program is positive.

    But Armenian-Americans in Chicago and Los Angeles cheered the
    decision in Watertown, where more than 8,000 people of Armenian
    descent live. The Town Council voted 8 to 0 Tuesday night to rescind
    Watertown's participation in the program.

    Ara Khachatourian -- editor of the Asbarez Daily, a 99-year-old
    Armenian newspaper based in Glendale, Calif. -- said the Watertown
    story would lead his newspaper today.

    "Genocide denial, whether it happens in Watertown, Massachusetts,
    or Beijing, China, is something that resonates with every Armenian,
    regardless of where they live," Khachatourian said.

    Meanwhile, some are organizing in the hope that others will follow
    Watertown's example. In the days ahead, Kaprielian said she plans to
    ask Beacon Hill politicians to talk with their towns about following
    Watertown. Devaney said she plans to talk to leaders in Newton and
    Waltham and will contact the other 64 Massachusetts communities that
    currently participate in the program to explain why Watertown dropped
    out. And the Armenian National Committee is calling for the ADL to
    alter its position.

    If the ADL would recognize the Armenian genocide, Kaligian said, the
    problem would be solved. But if that does not happen, Karine Birazian,
    the Armenian National Committee's Eastern region executive director,
    said the group hopes to target the program in other cities and towns.

    "I think the fact that the town of Watertown was able to . . . make
    this change will actually have a ripple effect within other
    communities," Birazian said.

    But she conceded that it will not be an easy sell politically,
    especially in communities lacking large Armenian-American
    populations. It is an issue that Arlington residents who oppose the
    program may soon encounter.

    "We are cognizant of world issues and are willing to work with
    any group," said Arlington Police Lieutenant Ken Hughes, who leads
    the town's No Place For Hate steering committee. But even knowing
    Watertown's issues, Hughes said he still supports the program. "What
    this program attempts to do is foster better relations with all
    people," he said. "Although people may differ on issues, this gives
    us the chance to work together."

    In Watertown, however, the time for working together seems to have
    passed. Even before the council meeting had ended Tuesday night,
    Town Manager Michael Driscoll had spoken to the town's superintendent
    of public works, Gerald Mee, about taking down the No Place For Hate
    sign in front of Town Hall.

    A night shift worker was dispatched to do the job, and by the time
    the meeting ended the sign was gone.
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