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ANC EM: Foxman Forces Shakeup in New England ADL

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  • ANC EM: Foxman Forces Shakeup in New England ADL

    Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts
    47 Nichols Avenue
    Watertown, MA 02472
    [email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE
    August 20, 2007
    Contact: Sevag Arzoumanian
    Tel: 617-233-3174

    FOXMAN FORCES SHAKEUP IN NEW ENGLAND ADL

    -- ADL National Leader Fires Regional Director Andrew H. Tarsy; Two
    Regional Board Members Resign in Protest

    -- ANC Calls for ADL National Leadership to End Genocide Denial;
    Support Armenian Genocide Legislation (H.Res.106 / S.Res.106)

    WATERTOWN, MA Turmoil in the New England Regional Anti-Defamation
    League (ADL) continued this weekend with two Board Members
    resigning following the firing of Regional Director Andrew H.
    Tarsy, for public calls on ADL National Director Abe Foxman to
    reverse policy and properly characterize the Armenian Genocide,
    reported the Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts
    (ANC-EM).

    "We are disappointed and outraged to hear that Mr. Tarsy was
    removed from his position simply for speaking openly and honestly
    about the Armenian Genocide," stated ANCEM chairperson Sharistan
    Melkonian. "Mr. Foxman and the ADL National Leadership are clearly
    out of step with their own membership, who have rightly concluded
    that genocide denial is morally indefensible and will only serve to
    diminish the credibility of this once-respected civil rights
    organization."

    Reports of Tarsy's firing and the resignations by Stewart L. Cohen
    and Boston City Councilman Mike Ross came just days after the New
    England ADL Board voted to call on the ADL National leadership to
    reverse their position, properly characterize the Armenian Genocide
    as 'genocide,' and support Armenian Genocide legislation (H.Res.106
    / S.Res.106). According to an August 17th Boston Globe article,
    Tarsy told reporter Keith O'Brien, "I strongly disagree with ADL's
    national position. It's my strong hope that we'll be able to move
    forward in a relationship with the Armenian community and the
    community in general." Just 48 hours prior, Tarsy had defended the
    ADL National's genocide denial position at the Watertown Town
    Council. Tarsy, clearly uncomfortable in his remarks before the
    capacity crowd at the Council meeting, was challenged when he
    evaded the word 'genocide' in describing the murder of over 1.5
    million Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government from 1915-1923.

    A myriad of Watertown residents urged the Town Council to take
    action, including ANC-EM spokesperson Grace Kehetian Kulegian,
    who stated "on behalf of Watertown's Armenian community - and
    our century-long history of service and sacrifice for our town - we
    call upon the Town Council to dissociate itself from the ADL until
    such time that: The Anti-Defamation League, through its National
    Director, Mr. Foxman, openly and unequivocally acknowledges
    the Armenian Genocide and supports congressional affirmation
    of this crime against humanity.

    The Watertown Town Council voted unanimously that evening to cut
    ties with the ADL, by disassociating with their "No Place for Hate"
    program.

    Following the New England ADL's public call for ADL National to
    reverse their position, the National ADL posted an "Open Letter to
    the New England Community," refraining from characterizing the
    events of 1915-1923 as 'genocide.' The letter also claimed that the
    ADL "takes no position" on Armenian Genocide legislation (H.Res.106
    / S.Res.106) while stating "We believe that legislative efforts
    outside of Turkey are counterproductive to the goal of having
    Turkey itself come to grips with its past."

    "Mr. Foxman is sadly reading from a page in the Turkish
    government's genocide denial playbook," stated Melkonian. "Instead
    of helping Turkey confront this dark page in human history, the ADL
    is enabling its continued genocide denial a decision which comes
    at the expense of its own reputation." The ADL statement comes as
    additional towns in Massachusetts prepare to follow Watertown's
    lead in ending their association with the ADL and Armenian Genocide
    denial.

    Foxman's claims of neutrality regarding Armenian Genocide
    legislation contradict earlier published statements in the Boston
    Globe and Los Angeles Times, where Foxman noted "The Turks and
    Armenians need to revisit their past. The Jewish community
    shouldn't be the arbiter of that history. And I don't think the
    U.S. Congress should be the arbiter either." According to press
    reports, Foxman joined the American Jewish Committee, B'nai B'rith
    and JINSA in forwarding a letter from Turkey's Jewish Community
    citing concerns about Armenian Genocide legislation to Members of
    Congress. According to an April 27th Jewish Telegraphic Agency
    article by Ron Kampeas, the ADL and JINSA "added their own
    statements opposing the bill."

    The Watertown - ADL controversy erupted in recent weeks, with
    Boston area civil rights advocates, and local Armenian and Jewish
    American community members expressing disappointment and outrage at
    recent statements by ADL National Director Abe Foxman denying the
    Armenian Genocide. Editorials and community letters in the local
    Watertown Tab and Boston Globe cast a shadow on the credibility of
    the anti-racism program, "No Place for Hate", due to its
    affiliation with the ADL.

    Reporter Keith O'Brien first reported Tarsy's firing in a front-
    page Boston Globe article on August 18th. The news was accompanied
    by a strongly worded Globe editorial, titled "No Synonyms for
    Genocide," arguing that the national ADL should not "pick and
    choose among genocides," and stating "if the national ADL doesn't
    acknowledge the [Armenian] genocide, it is complicit in a cover-
    up." An op/ed coauthored by Massachusetts State Representative
    Rachel Kaprielian and Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz,
    published in the Boston Globe on the same day, noted "For any
    organization or official to believe that there are differing sides
    to the Armenian Genocide is as much an outrage as it would be for
    Germany to say that the work of Jewish scholars, witnesses, and
    victim testimonies represented merely the "Jewish side" of the
    Holocaust." Kaprielian and Dershowitz went on to praise the New
    England Regional ADL for taking a principled stand, noting that the
    "regional chapter was courageous and correct in its decision to
    affirm its position that the [Armenian] genocide was fact."

    For a full listing of the press coverage this issue has received,
    visit: www.noplacefordenial.com
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