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Jewish groups pressure the ADL - Urge recognition of genocide

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  • Jewish groups pressure the ADL - Urge recognition of genocide

    Jewish groups pressure the ADL

    Urge recognition of genocide

    By Michael Levenson, Globe Staff | August 21, 2007


    Local Jewish groups rushed yesterday to sign a letter urging the
    Anti-Defamation League to acknowledge the massacre of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks as genocide, increasing pressure on the ADL after it
    fired its New England director for endorsing the emotionally charged
    position.


    Nancy K. Kaufman, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations
    Council of Greater Boston, e-mailed a letter yesterday to some 40
    prominent Jewish leaders in Massachusetts, asking them to support the
    ousted director and to recognize the genocide against Armenians.

    "We must never forget the Armenian genocide and maintain our guard
    against those who deny its occurrence," the letter said.

    Within hours of sending the letter, Kaufman said that 11 groups had
    signed and that more were expected to do so shortly.

    "I have never gotten such unanimous support for any position by the
    JCRC asI have in the last few days on this one," Kaufman said. "It
    doesn't matter where people are on the political spectrum -- left,
    right, middle -- people are really standing behind this because it
    strikes at the core of what it means to be a Jew and never again means
    never again."

    Signers of the letter include the Combined Jewish Philanthropies, the
    Russian Community Association of Massachusetts, the Hillel Council of
    New England, the Bureau of Jewish Education, and the David Project
    Center for Jewish Leadership.

    Kaufman said her group, which represents 41 Jewish organizations,
    unanimously approved a resolution in 2005 calling the massacre an act
    of genocide. "We just felt we needed to be on record," Kaufman
    said. "We needed to be in solidarity and in support of the Armenian
    community locally."

    The rift opened last week after the Town Council in Watertown, home to
    8,000 Armenian-Americans, voted unanimously to pull out of an ADL
    program calledNo Place for Hate. The town was protesting the ADL's
    refusal to acknowledgeas genocide the slaughter of 1.5 million
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks starting in 1915 in what is today Turkey.

    After the vote, the ADL's New England director, Andrew H. Tarsy, who
    had initially defended the ADL's position, said the massacre was
    genocide. Then hewas fired by the national ADL.

    The ADL's national director, Abraham H. Foxman, said the ADL has no
    official position on the genocide issue. But it does not support US
    legislation that would affirm the genocide label.

    In an open letter, the ADL has called the bill pending in Congress
    "counterproductive" and said the organization, founded in 1913 to
    fight anti-Semitism, worried what effect it would have on Jews in
    Turkey.

    The controversy has since drawn in Jewish leaders across the region,
    not all of whom are in agreement with the local ADL. Grand Rabbi
    Y.A. Korff, a chaplain of the City of Boston, said the local chapter
    made a mistake in breaking ranks with its national leaders, who he
    said are better suited to assess "very sensitive international and
    diplomatic nuances and ramifications."

    "As with any organization, you can't have different chapters going
    their own way, and basically that undermines the national
    organization," Korff said in an interview from Jerusalem. "In my view,
    the essential issue is how doesa national organization make these
    decisions, and who is in the best position to make these decisions."

    Barry Shrage, president of the Combined Jewish Philanthropies, said he
    supports Tarsy and the local ADL. "I think that Andy and the board of
    the local ADL did the right thing and did what they thought was right,
    and in this case, the local organization is a lot closer to what needs
    to be done than the national is," Shrage said in an interview from
    Jerusalem.

    Rabbi Barbara Penzner of Temple Hillel B'nai Torah in West Roxbury,
    said the local ADL was standing up in the tradition of its late former
    leader, Leonard P. Zakim, for whom the bridge over the Charles River
    is named. "I think the ADL national has made a huge mistake, and even
    if they explain that there's political and organizational issues, we
    as a community ought to stand for the moral high ground," Penzner
    said.

    © Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
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