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  • Newton considers severing ADL ties

    http://www.townonline.com/newton/homepage/x2110145 239

    Newton considers severing ADL ties

    -------------------------------------------- --------------------
    Photo by Barbara Lehmann

    Andrew Tarsy, right, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League
    until he was fired last week, led a training session on hate crimes and
    extremist groups for members of the Wellesley Police Department last
    year. By Chrissie Long, Staff Writer

    GateHouse News Service
    Tue Aug 21, 2007, 04:36 PM EDT

    --------------------------------------------- -------------------

    Newton -

    Newton Corner resident David Boyajian unintentionally ignited a
    national controversy when he wrote a letter to a newspaper
    last month.

    His letter to the Watertown TAB and Press prompted officials in that
    city to withdraw from an eight-year partnership with the American
    Defamation League's No Place for Hate. The effect of the letter was
    exacerbated when the head of the local ADL branch was fired for
    ultimately agreeing with Watertown's position and several board members
    resigned.

    Now, the same discussion has entered Newton, with members of the city's
    Human Rights Commission and others debating whether the city should
    break its ties to the national ADL.

    "What will happen [to Newton's No Place for Hate], I wouldn't know until
    we have our full discussion," said Marianne Ferguson, chairman of the
    Human Rights Commission, who expected to begin discussion at an Aug. 21
    meeting (scheduled to take place after the TAB's deadline). "I don't
    want to speak for the commission because we haven't had a full
    discussion."

    Newton adopted the No Place for Hate program in 1999 in an effort to
    align itself with a national campaign for tolerance and a fight against
    anti-Semitism, racism and all other forms of bigotry.

    But the program came under question this summerwhen residents learned
    that the national director of the parent organization - the
    Anti-Defamation League - refused to recognize the Armenian genocide.

    Boyajian pointed to an April 21 article in the Los Angeles Times
    "Genocide resolution still far from certain" that reported that the
    ADL's national director, Abraham Foxman, opposes congressional
    affirmation of the genocide.

    Watertown's Town Council voted unanimously on Aug. 14 to sever ties with
    the No Place for Hate program. Two days later, Andrew H. Tarsy, the
    ADL's New England regional director who had defended the ADL's position
    just days earlier, broke ranks with the national groups and said the ADL
    should acknowledge the genocide. One day after that, Tarsy was fired.

    In a carefully-worded statement released Tuesday, Foxman seemed to
    soften his stance on the issue, saying that the "consequences" of the
    actions of the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians were "tantamount to
    genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they would have called
    it genocide."

    But Foxman still refused to support legislation recognizing the
    genocide.

    Foxman's latest statement isn't good enough for Boyajian.

    "Genocides need to be officially recognized and put in the public sphere
    to at least help prevent future genocides," said Boyajian, an
    Armenian-American. "The national ADL is lobbying against Armenian
    genocide legislation in Congress. They need to stop working against
    congressional resolutions and start working for them."

    The Armenian Genocide bill, House Bill 106, which was proposed in
    January, would ensure that the United States foreign policy reflects
    that the Armenian genocide did in fact exist. The bill is currently in
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee. There's a similar bill in the
    Senate.

    Historians have long recognized the Armenian genocide as a campaign
    waged against ethnic Armenians by the Ottoman government during and
    after World War I. Between 1915 and 1923, as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians died.

    "This is a matter of historic truth," said state Rep. Peter Koutoujian,
    D-Newton. "To call it a slaughter or a massacre does not in anyway
    reflect what a genocide is."

    Congressman Barney Frank, D-4th, a core sponsor of the Armenian Genocide
    bill, expressed his disappointment in Foxman's comments.

    "I think they made a mistake," Frank told the TAB. "I am very
    disappointed with the national ADL, and I am proud of New England's
    reaction."

    But whether Newton decides to sever ties with No Place for Hate is still
    under question.

    Boyajian, who supports No Place for Hate, would like to see communities
    continue to operate such programs, but wants to see municipalities break
    any relationships with the larger ADL organization.

    "We are asking for local No Place for Hate programs to sever their ties
    with ADL until ADL openly acknowledges the Armenian genocide and
    supports congressional affirmation of this crime against humanity,"
    Boyajian said, indicating that his stance is outlined by the
    www.noplacefordenial.com Web site.

    Prior to the release of Foxman's statement Tuesday, Mayor David Cohen
    sent a letter to Foxman asking him to "reinstate" Tarsy and to recognize
    the genocide.

    "Specifically, I call on you to reverse the national ADL position and
    recognize the World War I genocide perpetrated against the Armenian
    people. Furthermore, I call on you to reinstate Mr. Tarsy," Cohen wrote.

    At his press conference Monday, Cohen affirmed Newton's commitment
    toward a No Place for Hate-like program, even if the city were to break
    ties with the ADL.

    "Whether or not Newton decides to remain a No Place for Hate community
    will in no way alter the hard work being done to promote tolerance and
    peace in our city every day of the year," he said during his press
    conference Monday. ". Advocates for peace and social justice throughout
    the city will continue to plan and carry out programs and events that
    will unite the people in Newton against hate."

    Newton resident Steve Grossman, a former board member of the regional
    ADL, suggested that communities wait before severing ties with No Place
    for Hate or ADL.

    "I would recommend that communities hold off in making abrupt decisions,
    pending a change in national ADL policy," he said. "If the national ADL
    does not change policy, some of these cities and towns will have no
    choice in ending the relationship. The moral disconnect may be too much
    for people to absorb."

    According to Grossman, Foxman is visiting Boston Tuesday and Wednesday
    to meet with regional staff. Grossman hopes that the visit will result
    in a changed stance.

    For many observers, accepting the title "Armenian genocide" is not good
    enough. Foxman would have to support the congressional resolution,
    something he declined to do Tuesday.

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

    The ADL was founded in 1913 to stop any defamation of Jewish people and
    "to secure justice and fair treatment to all citizens alike and it put
    an end forever to unjust and unfair discrimination against and ridicule
    of any sect or body of citizens."

    Visit www.NewtonTAB.com for the most recent story.
    Chrissie Long can be reached at [email protected].

    Letter from Mayor David Cohen to ADL's executive director


    Dear Mr. Foxman,

    I write this letter on behalf of the citizens of the City of Newton,
    Massachusetts - home to the largest Jewish population in the state and a
    "No Place for Hate" community since the program's inception - as we
    stand with Israel, and with our Armenian brothers and sisters. There is
    no uncertainty that more than 1.5 million Armenians were summarily
    displaced and marched to their deaths by the Ottoman rulers in the early
    20th century - a genocide.

    I am in full support of the actions taken by the New England Regional
    Board of the ADL, and its Executive Director, Andrew Tarsy, in
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide. I am also in full support of the
    legislation introduced by U.S. Representative Adam Schiff calling on the
    United States to formally recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    The recognition of the Armenian Genocide is an important step along the
    path of peace and freedom, and crucial in combating other genocides now
    and in the future. As history has shown, failure to recognize atrocities
    of the past leaves open the possibility of violence in the future. In
    fact it was Hitler himself who, when contemplating the Holocaust said:
    "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" The
    Armenian Genocide is a tragic fact of history, and failure to recognize
    it as such does a disservice to people all over the world who have
    suffered from discrimination and injustice.

    Since its inception in 1913, the Anti Defamation League has been a
    forceful advocate for tolerance and justice throughout the world. I am
    calling on you to stay true to your mission, "To secure justice and fair
    treatment to all," by providing your support of the Armenian people
    around the world. Specifically, I call on you to reverse the national
    ADL position and recognize the World War I genocide perpetrated against
    the Armenian people. Furthermore, I call on you to reinstate Mr. Tarsy.
    With these two acts, you can ensure that people around the world will
    continue to look to the Anti Defamation League as a beacon of hope and
    justice and as an intractable barrier to intolerance and hate.

    I believe that this is a defining issue, and the manner in which ADL
    resolves it will determine whether Newton continues as a "No Place for
    Hate" community.
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