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Genocide debate has local fallout Affiliations in ADL program

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  • Genocide debate has local fallout Affiliations in ADL program

    REGION
    Genocide debate has local fallout Affiliations in ADL program revisited

    By Ralph Ranalli, Globe Staff | August 23, 2007

    The fallout over the Anti-Defamation League's reluctant recognition of the
    Armenian genocide spread to Boston's western suburbs this week, as local
    communities scrambled to reevaluate their relationships with the ADL's No
    Place for Hate program and, in some cases, discovered that they had not
    participated for years.

    The controversy erupted this month when officials in Watertown, which has a
    sizable Armenian-American community, voted to end their affiliation with the
    No Place for Hate program. A number of civic leaders and groups urged the
    ADL to adopt the conclusion widely held by human rights scholars that the
    Armenian killings fit the generally accepted definition of genocide.

    For three weeks, Abraham Foxman, the ADL's national director, declined to do
    so, citing the sensibilities of the government in Turkey, which has been one
    of the few Muslim countries to support the state of Israel. Last week, the
    group fired its New England director, Andrew Tarsy, for taking a contrary
    position on the issue. The firing prompted the resignation of two regional
    ADL board members.

    But on Tuesday, the national ADL reversed course and issued a statement
    declaring that the the mass killings of as many as 1.5 million Armenians by
    the Ottoman Turks beginning in 1915 "were indeed tantamount to a genocide."

    The ADL established the No Place for Hate program in 1999 as a vehicle for
    local municipalities to take a public stand against bias. To earn the
    designation, cities and towns had to show the ADL that they had taken
    certain steps, including hosting at least three antibias events. Communities
    would then receive recertification each year, provided they held at least
    two more annual events.

    According to the website of the Massachusetts Municipal Association, which
    cosponsors No Place for Hate, nearly 60 communities in the Boston area
    besides Watertown signed on to the program, including seven western suburbs:
    Franklin, Natick, Needham, Newton, Sudbury, Waltham, and Wellesley.

    Yet a survey conducted by the Globe found that officials in just three --
    Needham, Newton, and Wellesley -- could confirm that they were still
    participating. In other cases, the program appeared to be little more than a
    logo on the town's website or, in some cases, an increasingly distant
    memory.

    In Natick, for example, officials decided to take no official position on
    the controversy after discovering that the town had not actively
    participated in the No Place for Hate program for at least five years.

    Shortly before the ADL reversed its position on the genocide, Selectman
    Joshua Ostroff said he believed that the ADL was out of step with generally
    accepted thinking on the Armenian genocide, but that the organization's
    other good works should not be discounted because of the controversy.

    In an interview a short time later, however, the chairwoman of the Natick
    Board of Selectmen, Carol Gloff, said that the point was moot because the
    town was no longer an active participant in the program.

    In fact, town records appear to show that Natick adopted the designation in
    2001, sent a representative to a No Place for Hate banquet in 2002, and then
    had no further participation in the program.

    Mayor Jeannette A. McCarthy of Waltham said that "all of [the genocides]
    should be treated the same," but called her opinion a personal one. The
    city, she said, had not been an active participant in the ADL program for
    years.

    Privately, some officials said it appeared that well-meaning individuals
    pushed cities and towns to participate in the program after it was first
    created, but that the recertification process proved too onerous.

    In Franklin, local officials said that they were trying to figure out the
    status of the program in their town, but were having difficulty because the
    two citizens who had originally sponsored it had moved out of state.

    Sudbury officials could not be reached for comment this week.

    Even in cases where participation in the program was confirmed, officials
    seemed to be groping for a response during vacation season.

    In Needham, two members of that city's Human Rights Committee reached this
    week, the Rev. John Buehrens and Marjorie Freundlich, said that they could
    not comment on the issue until the group had a chance to meet.

    In Wellesley, Selectwoman Harriet Warshaw, who was primarily responsible for
    the town's participation in the program, also declined comment, saying she
    needed a chance to talk to her fellow selectmen.

    Only Newton officials had an immediate response to the controversy. Last
    week, after a flurry of e-mails, both Jewish and non-Jewish members of the
    city's Human Rights Commission unanimously called on the ADL to change its
    stance on the Armenian genocide.

    On Tuesday, Brenda Krasnow, a member of the commission who is Jewish,
    welcomed the news of the ADL's reversal.

    "It's a very interesting development," she said. "We hope it's a step in the
    right direction."
    (c) Copyright <http://www.boston.com/help/bostoncom_info/copy right> 2007 The
    New York Times Company

    Source:
    http://www.boston.com/news/local/ articles/2007/08/23/genocide_debate_has_local_fall out/
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