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Anti-Defamation League Reverses Course, Recognizes Armenian Genocide

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  • Anti-Defamation League Reverses Course, Recognizes Armenian Genocide

    ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE REVERSES COURSE, RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Keith O'Brien, Globe Staff

    by the Boston Globe City & Region Desk
    Tuesday, August 21, 2007

    The national office of the Anti-Defamation League reversed its
    long-held position today and acknowledged the Armenian genocide of
    1915, saying in a statement that the mass killings of that era at
    the hands of the Ottoman Turks "were indeed tantamount to genocide."

    However, the statement reaffirms the national ADL's belief that
    the legislation pending in Congress to recognize the genocide is
    "a counterproductive diversion."

    The ADL's statement, released to the Globe and on the group's
    website this afternoon, came "in light of the heated controversy,"
    which began weeks ago in suburban Watertown, where more than 8,000
    Armenian-Americans call home.

    It came just days after ADL's national director, Abraham H. Foxman,
    fired the regional director of the New England ADL for making a
    similar statement.

    It was not known just yet how Foxman's statement today would affect
    Andrew H. Tarsy, who was fired last week, or how it would influence
    a regional board meeting scheduled for Wednesday morning.

    The controversy came to a head last week when the Town Council in
    Watertown voted unanimously to pull out of an ADL program called
    No Place for Hate because it did not acknowledge the slaughter of
    1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks starting in 1915 in what is
    today Turkey.

    Tarsy had initially defended the national ADL's position. After the
    vote, Tarsy changed course and called the massacre genocide and was
    fired by the national ADL.

    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.
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