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  • Arlington pulls out of No Place for Hate

    The Arlington Advocate: Arlington pulls out of No Place for Hate

    By Shauna Staveley/Staff Writer
    GateHouse News Service
    Wed Aug 22, 2007, 01:38 PM EDT

    Arlington, Mass. -

    The Arlington No Place for Hate Program Steering Committee decided
    Monday night in an emergency meeting that they would suspend their
    involvement wit= h the committee.

    This decision was in lieu of recent controversy involving the program
    sponsor, the Anti-Defamation League, and their supposed inability on
    the National level to acknowledge the 1915-1917 murder of 1.5 Million
    Armenians by the Ottoman Empire a genocide, committee officials said.

    "Everyone in the committee felt clearly as the Watertown (program
    ending), and following stories (about the controversy) were happening
    that we had to do something about this," said Cindy Friedman,
    chairwoman of the Arlington No Place for Hate Committee. "We didn't
    want to wait and not respond."

    Friedman said the committee analyzed and discussed a diverse array of
    information, including a written letter from the Armenian community
    and Arlington activists, as well as gathered information on the ADL.

    Another influential occurrence was a reported divide in perspective
    between the Regional and National ADL leaders. According to the Boston
    Globe in an article on Aug. 19, two New England board members resigned
    after New Englan= d Regional Director Andrew Tarsy was fired over his
    push to acknowledge the Armenian genocide.

    "At the very least, the ADL can acknowledge the New England Regional
    chapte= r and their stance - to call the genocide a genocide,"
    Friedman said. "And = I think they should reinstate Andrew Tarsy. They
    should reinstate whom they fired, call it a genocide and support the
    position of the New England chapter. That's what they could do."

    One piece of information was an advertisement by the ADL titled "An
    Open Letter to the New England Community." That advertisement is
    scheduled to ru= n all week in various newspapers according to the ADL
    website, and states the following:

    "ADL has acknowledged and never denied the massacres of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians - and by some accounts more than one
    million - at th= e hands of the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1918=85we
    cannot let a disagreement on = how to proceed on one issue undermine
    all our joint good work."

    Many Arlington residents, both Armenian and non-Armenian, activist and
    non-activist, have increased their criticism after this advertisement
    was published. The issue has especially affected Armenians, however,
    who have relatives that directly experienced the horrors of 1915-1918.

    Lucine Zadoiam-Kouchakdjian is a four-year Armenian resident of
    Arlington whose grandparent's perished and parent's escaped the
    genocide. She said he= r grandparent's took refuge in an Armenian
    church in Bitlis (Turkey), and upo= n the church being filled with
    refugees; it was burnt to the ground. "It is a known fact," she said.
    Her parents both took refuge in Romania, where they first met.

    "My father's side, he was a young man and went to Syria, and from
    there he tried to gather orphans to have orphanages. There was
    reluctance to talk about the subject, as would many people who go
    through tragedy, to their children. They would say bits and pieces,
    but wouldn't have (the) heart to pour out their grief," she said.

    Zadoiam-Kouchakdjian's story is far from unique, and that is precisely
    why this controversy is so hurtful to the Armenian people.

    "There are all these stories," she said. "Everyone outside of Armenia,
    or Western Armenia (now Eastern Turkey): why are they outside of
    lands? Becaus= e of the genocide. What business (do they have in being
    outside of their homeland)? Because of Survivors that took refuge in
    Middle Eastern countrie= s or in Europe or the United States. Every
    Armenian would have story. That is why it's ridiculous to support the
    denial of Turkey (about the genocide)."

    Berge Ayvazian, an Armenian resident for 28 years that has raised
    three children in the area, is a member of the Armenian Assembly Board
    of Trustees. He said the Assembly is the is the "largest U.S. based
    advocacy organization regarding Armenian issues located in
    Washington. We have been backing legislation and working with congress
    to get it passed."

    Ayvazian said "in practice he was normally supportive" of the No Place
    for Hate Program in Arlington, but his view changed due to recent
    articles he has read on the controversy.

    "I just think it's extremely hypocritical to promote a program against
    hate bigotry and divisiveness and deny a genocide that was widely
    recognized," Ayvazian said.

    One piece of legislation the Assembly is working to pass in Congress
    is House Resolution 106, introduced on Jan. 30, 2007, which in the
    legislative documents states that the resolution is:

    "Calling upon the President to ensure that the foreign policy of the
    United States reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity
    concerning issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and
    genocide documented in the United States record relating to the
    Armenian Genocide, and for other purposes."

    The ADL responds

    What is interesting about the resolution, in relation to the ADL, is
    their most recent press release titled "ADL Statement on the Armenian
    Genocide," released Tuesday afternoon.

    In the release, National Director Abraham H. Foxman said "on
    reflection, we have come to share the view of Henry Morgenthau, Sr.,
    that the consequences of those actions (on 1915-1918) were indeed
    tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they
    would have called it genocide."

    Bob Wolfson, the ADL Associate National Director for Regional
    Operations, said in a phone interview that he hoped that this would
    start the healing process of the Armenian Community.

    "The Watertown action was based on the notion that we were denying the
    genocide, which we never did," Wolfson said. "The use of that term was
    problematic for very complicated political reasons, so we decided to
    change our policy and use the term. And I believe and hope the
    Armenian community will applaud it and I hope the good work with the
    program in places like Arlington will continue."

    The problem for residents, however, is the bottom paragraph of the
    "ADL Statement on the Armenian Genocide," where Foxman stated the
    following abou= t congressional resolutions such as 106:

    "We continue to firmly believe that a congressional resolution on such
    matters is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster
    reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the
    Turkish Jewish communit= y and the important multilateral relationship
    between Turkey, Israel, and the United States."

    Upon reading this statement, Ayvazian, member of the Armenian Board of
    Assembly, said "Certainly they don't support the resolution
    (106). They think it's counterproductive. It appears they value
    reconciliation as a higher objective than recognition (of the
    genocide). It's hard for me to se= e how you'd achieve reconciliation
    until you receive recognition."

    "It's unfortunate that a valuable program such as No Place For Hate
    has bee= n put at risk by the ADL's unwillingness to step forward and
    recognize that it's not tantamount to genocide, but it is genocide -
    and it's important that recognition come before reconciliation," he
    said. "None of us want to put the Jewish/Turkish community at
    risk. But if they're at risk, that puts into perspective even more the
    importance of recognition." Other complaints against the ADL

    Elaine Hagopian, a retired professor from Arlington who studied the
    Middle East for more than 45 years, earning two Fulbright grants for
    research, sai= d the problem with Anti-Defamation League's association
    with a program like N= o Place For Hate runs much deeper than the
    Armenian Genocide issue. She said the problem was merely a "trigger to
    expose the ADL for its' duplicity."

    She discussed an incident in 1993, where a the District Attorney of
    San Francisco had 700 pages of documents in which he claimed the ADL
    was spying= , and had files compiled over 30 years on over 10,000
    individuals and 950 groups of "all political stripes, including Arab
    and Palestinian groups, an= d anti-apartheid activists before South
    Africa became independent."

    The DA dropped the accusations a few months later, but a class-action
    lawsuit was filed, and according to published reports, the
    Anti-Defamation League settled out of court in 1999.

    Hagopian also said the Middle East Studies Association once condemned
    the ADL because they "inhibited academic freedom."

    Knowing of these incidents, and others in which Hagopian said the ADL
    tried to "suppress dissent," Hagopian and other Arlington residents
    tried to prevent the No Place For Hate Program from being created
    months ago, but th= e attempt failed.

    "The issue of having these programs (such as No Place For Hate) is it
    gives the Anti-Defamation League credibility," she said. "It keeps in
    the public mind that they are somehow a civil and human rights group,
    when really they are doing other things in the background - one of
    those being an advocate for Israel, which makes it impossible to be a
    human rights group. It opens opportunity to see the other faces."

    "No one would argue that the ADL has no right to advocate for Israel,"
    she said. "On the other hand, they cannot say that they are promoting
    diversity and respect for others and so forth when they target people
    and groups that they see as critics of Israel - or people who, like
    Arabs who represent a different point of view=85. So if you exclude
    certain groups from being covered by the ADL because of an Israeli
    agenda, then ADL really needs to choose whether it is really a human
    rights group equal to all, or an advocate to Israel."

    However, Heather Steckel, a Social Worker at Peabody High School, said
    her experience with the ADL during a workshop was overwhelmingly
    positive.

    "Through grant money they came in to do teacher work shops and did
    really well=85they've been fabulous," Steckel said. "I've had nothing
    but good experiences with them and their workers."

    Steckel said they asked her the following spring if she would like to
    use a $20,000 donation they received from an anonymous
    donor. According to Steckel, the ADL is going to use all of the money
    on training kids, faculty= , and technical support for two years.

    "So the fact that they came to me, because I did a workshop I think
    was wonderful," she said. "I don't agree with their policy, absolutely
    not, but as an organization they've done very well by us. So much so
    that I thought about going to work with them before this happened."

    Arlington No Place For Hate Program Steering Committee Chairwoman
    Friedman said that the program has brought great things to Arlington
    that have nothing to do with the ADL or its' sponsorship.

    "The idea that a community stands up, from the board of selectmen down
    says we are committed to making this a welcoming place to live, and we
    are committed to activities that encourage that, its an incredibly
    positive thing," Friedman said. "We had organized the start of
    capturing oral histories of people in Arlington, how they got here,
    why they stay, and wer= e starting to have dialogue between people how
    we're different and how we're the same. All of that is incredibly
    positive."

    "We were just starting to do all of that stuff," she said. "We had our
    proclamation and were organizing the Town Day. It was great and
    brought together all the different groups, who all have some piece in
    making Arlington a safe and welcoming place. So, we are saddened by
    this. We think there are great things about the program, but we just
    cannot continue under these circumstances."


    Source: http://www.townonline.com/arlington/news/x66348006 4
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