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Under Pressure, ADL Admits: Turks' Armenian Massacre Was Genocide

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  • Under Pressure, ADL Admits: Turks' Armenian Massacre Was Genocide

    UNDER PRESSURE, ADL ADMITS: TURKS' ARMENIAN MASSACRE WAS GENOCIDE
    By Shmuel Rosner

    Ha'aretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spag es/896179.html
    Aug 21 2007
    Israel

    WASHINGTON - The mission statement for "No Place For Hate" says
    that it will build "bridges of understanding," but until yesterday
    it appeared that the bridge had collapsed. However, Abe Foxman,
    the national director of the Anti-Defamation League, which runs the
    Boston-area program, yesterday tried to repair the damage.

    In an effort to extricate himself from a scandal surrounding the
    ADL's refusal to support a bill calling on the Bush administration
    to recognize the 1915-17 Turkish massacre of its Armenian minority
    as genocide, Foxman did an abrupt about-face. After consulting with
    Nobel Prize-winning author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, Foxman
    referred to the Armenian massacre as a "genocide" for the first time.

    The uproar began two weeks ago, when Watertown, Massachusetts, a
    suburb of Boston which has an Armenian population of several thousand,
    decided to stop participating in "No Place For Hate" once it realized
    that the ADL - which claims to oppose the discrimination of "any sect
    or body of citizens" - did not intend to support the bill. Several
    other suburbs were considering following in Watertown's footsteps, and
    activists in other states threatened to target the ADL program as well.

    The Democratic leadership in the House of Representatives
    enthusiastically supports the bill, proposed by California Democrat
    Rep. Adam Schiff. Turkey denies that it committed genocide against
    its Armenian minority and cautions allies and rivals alike against
    recognizing it. This policy has been pretty successful, with countries
    such as Israel and the U.S. refusing to retroactively acknowledge
    that the massacre was the first genocide of the 20th century, out
    of fear of causing a rift in diplomatic relations. In recent years,
    this distortion of history has been the focus of rising criticism.

    The ADL was an almost incidental victim of the disappointment and
    anger felt by the American Armenian community. Many other large
    Jewish organizations have also refrained from supporting the bill
    or taking a stance on the Armenian genocide. They are interested in
    maintaining warm relations between Israel and Turkey, and between
    the United States and Turkey, and they don't want to make the Jewish
    community of Turkey vulnerable to revenge attacks.

    These were also Foxman's reasons. He had said the issue did not
    constitute an ethical stance against an unethical one, but a situation
    in which one must choose the lesser evil between two unattractive
    options. In any case, argued Foxman, his perspective did have an
    ethical element: While acknowledging the genocide is merely a symbolic
    gesture to the Armenian community, putting ties with Turkey at risk
    could have far-reaching consequences, including endangering the lives
    of Turkish Jews.

    But such explanations didn't help the ADL - partly because it is the
    organization most identified with the legacy of another 20th-century
    genocide, the Holocaust, making it seem more hypocritical than other
    groups. Another reason is that it was the ADL that ran the program
    in Watertown, the heart of the Armenian community in America.

    The Boston-area Jewish community had not given the national leadership
    of the ADL its support. Nancy Kaufman, executive director of the
    Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston, said that while
    the local Jewish community understands the complexity of the issue,
    the council thinks the U.S. should recognize the genocide.

    The ADL itself was split over the issue; it fired New England regional
    director Andrew Tarsy for telling The Boston Globe that, "I strongly
    disagree with the ADL's national position."

    Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz also came out against
    the ADL's previous stance, writing an op-ed in the Globe with State
    Representative Rachel Kaprielian, who represents Watertown, that
    compared the Armenian genocide to the Holocaust.

    "For any organization or official to believe that there are differing
    sides to the Armenian Genocide," they wrote, "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." For the past two weeks, the New England office
    of the ADL had become the target of fierce attacks, and some went as
    far as calling for Foxman's resignation.
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