Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ADL local leader fired on Armenian issue

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

  • ADL local leader fired on Armenian issue

    ADL local leader fired on Armenian issue
    Genocide question sparked bitter debate
    Andrew H. Tarsy's firing sparked a backlash.

    By Keith O'Brien, Globe Staff | August 18, 2007

    The national Anti-Defamation League fired its New England regional
    director yesterday, one day after he broke ranks with national ADL
    leadership and said the human rights organization should acknowledge
    the Armenian genocide that began in 1915.

    Sign up for: Globe Headlines e-mail | Breaking News Alerts

    The firing of Andrew H. Tarsy, who had served as regional director for
    about two years and as civil rights counsel for about five years
    before that, prompted an immediate backlash among prominent local
    Jewish leaders against the ADL's national leadership and its national
    director, Abraham H. Foxman.

    "My reaction is that this was a vindictive, intolerant, and destructive
    act, ironically by an organization and leader whose mission --
    fundamental mission -- is to promote tolerance," Newton businessman
    Steve Grossman, a former ADL regional board member, said yesterday.

    "I predict that Foxman's actions will precipitate wholesale
    resignations from the regional board, a meaningful reduction in ADL's
    regional fund-raising, and will further exacerbate the ADL's
    relationship with the non-Jewish community coming out of this crisis
    around the Armenian genocide."

    Tarsy, 38, said he had been struggling with the national position for
    weeks and finally told Foxman in a phone conversation Thursday that he
    found the ADL's stance "morally indefensible."


    The regional board's executive committee backed Tarsy and, according to
    a source fa miliar with the discussion, even went a step further,
    resolving to support legislation now pending before Congress to
    acknowledge the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians during the World War I
    era as genocide.

    The national office's three-page response -- which it provided
    yesterday to the Globe -- did not mention the local office's intent to
    support the legislation. But it made clear just how far apart the two
    sides were on an issue with local, national, and international
    implications.

    The letter, signed by Foxman and Glen S. Lewy, the ADL's national
    chairman, said "we have acknowledged the massacres of Armenians at the
    hands of the Ottoman Empire and called on Turkey to do more to confront
    its past and reconcile with Armenia. We will continue to press Turkey,
    publicly and privately . . ." But the letter also makes clear that the
    national ADL feels the safety of Israel, which considers Turkey a rare
    Muslim ally, is paramount.

    The national ADL leaders also said employees who do not agree with the
    ADL's position should not differ pubicly, but should resign. "No
    organization can or should tolerate such an act of open defiance," the
    letter said.

    Asked how they would resolve the difference of opinion, both local and
    national leaders said they did not know.

    "They've taken a position," Foxman said in an interview. "We've taken a
    position. I hope they will read our position and hopefully we'll have
    conversations."

    Tarsy's firing -- and the national office's rebuke of the local
    office's independence -- marked the latest twist in a debate that began
    weeks ago in Watertown, home to more than 8,000 Armenian-Americans.
    Residents there became angry when they learned that the ADL was the
    sponsor of the town's anti-bigotry program "No Place For Hate" and, on
    Tuesday this week, the Watertown Town Council voted unanimously to pull
    out of the program.

    At issue was not the program itself, but rather a tangle of
    international politics dating back more than 90 years. 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 have recognized the killings as genocide. But the Turkish
    government has refused to accept the genocide label and the national
    ADL refuses to use it as well.

    In a 438-word open letter slated to appear in advertisements inside
    local newspapers beginning next week, the ADL does not use the word
    genocide. Officially, Foxman reiterated yesterday, the ADL has no
    position on the genocide issue. But it does not support the legislation
    in Congress. In the open letter yesterday, the ADL called it
    "counterproductive" and the organization, founded in 1913 to fight
    anti-Semitism, worried what effect passing the legislation would have
    on Jews living in Turkey.

    Critics say this position is hypocritical. Foxman "should understand
    that the truth of any genocide is not conditional upon political
    relationships," said Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian
    National Committee of America in Washington, D.C. Rather, he said, it
    should be dictated by "truth" and "history."

    As recently as Tuesday night, however, Tarsy defended the ADL's
    position before a hostile crowd at the Watertown Town Council meeting.
    In explaining why he did it, Tarsy said yesterday that he was doing the
    best he could to explain the ADL policy while struggling at the same
    time to change the policy internally. Neither side would back down and
    he was fired.

    "I have been in conflict over this issue for several weeks," Tarsy
    said. "I regret at this point any characterization of the genocide that
    I made publicly other than to call it a genocide. I think that kind of
    candor about history is absolutely fundamental."


    Both the Jewish and Armenian-American communities rushed to Tarsy's
    defense yesterday in the wake of his firing and applauded him for
    taking the stand that ultimately cost him his job.

    "I'm devastated to hear the news," said Ronne Friedman, senior rabbi at
    Temple Israel, the largest synagogue in Boston. "I think he's really a
    quality professional and a wonderful person of conscience. I think it's
    an inexcusable behavior on the part of the national office."

    Grossman said Tarsy provided "moral leadership" and surely would have
    invigorated a new generation of ADL members in New England if he had
    been given the chance. Hamparian said it spoke poorly of the ADL's
    national leadership that Tarsy "was not rewarded, but fired for
    speaking the truth." And James Rudolph, the ADL's regional board
    chairman and partner at a Boston law firm, said he would miss working
    with Tarsy.

    "I'm disappointed," Rudolph said. "He was an extraordinary leader and
    I'm sure that a lot of people affiliated with the board and affiliated
    with the ADL share my disappointment."

    Rudolph, like Foxman, said he is hoping to have further conversations
    with the national office in the days ahead regarding the differences
    between them.

    But they will be doing it without Tarsy, who said that he has no idea
    what he will do next.

    "I have the greatest respect for the ADL and for its staff and
    leadership," Tarsy said, referring to the people he has worked with in
    the regional office over the years. "And I want very badly to see the
    ADL do what's right on this issue."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X