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  • Under Fire, ADL Flips on Armenian Genocide

    Jewish Exponent, PA
    Aug 23 2007


    Under Fire, ADL Flips on Armenian Genocide
    August 23, 2007


    Andrew Tarsy
    Ben Harris
    Jewish Telegraphic Agency
    New York

    In a dramatic reversal, the Anti-Defamation League's national
    director has issued a statement describing the massacres perpetrated
    by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as "tantamount to
    genocide."

    The ADL and its national director, Abraham Foxman, have faced
    mounting criticism in recent weeks for refusing to use the genocide
    label and for firing Andrew Tarsy, the head of the organization's
    Boston office, who publicly challenged that policy.

    Tarsy's dismissal sparked a furious backlash from local community
    leaders -- including critical statements from prominent Boston Jews,
    a "community statement" calling for the ADL to change its position,
    and the resignation of two members of the ADL's regional board.

    But in a statement issued Tuesday, the ADL said, "We have never
    negated but have always described the painful events of 1915-1918
    perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as massacres
    and atrocities. On reflection, we have come to share the view of
    Henry Morgenthau, Sr. that the consequences of those actions were
    indeed tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide had existed then,
    they would have called it genocide," the statement said.

    When asked in a Boston Globe interview last month if he believed what
    happened to the Armenians was genocide, Foxman was quoted as saying:
    "I don't know." Critics argued that Foxman's remark portrayed the
    issue as open to debate, with some calling it genocide denial.

    ADL insists the change stems from its concern for Jewish unity at a
    moment of great peril for communities around the world.

    "I was just disheartened by how the Jewish community was being torn
    apart," Foxman said Tuesday as he traveled to Boston to meet with
    community leaders.

    In recent days, ADL has faced a budding rebellion on the part of the
    organization's Boston leadership, which adopted two resolutions on
    the issue last week, one expressing confidence in Tarsy and the other
    supporting legislation in Congress acknowledging the Armenian
    genocide.

    Two prominent members of the ADL's regional board -- former chairman
    of the Polaroid Corp., Stewart Cohen, and Boston City Council member
    Mike Ross -- reportedly resigned in protest over the issue.

    The ADL has been under fire since the Armenian community in
    Watertown, Mass., one of the country's largest, began agitating to
    have the town rescind its participation in "No Place for Hate," a
    popular anti-bigotry program the ADL sponsors. On Aug. 14, the Town
    Council unanimously voted to end its relationship with the program,
    and other Massachusetts communities were reported to be considering
    similar moves.

    Watertown's Armenian community was piqued by the ADL's longtime
    refusal to support the congressional legislation, which is vigorously
    opposed by Turkey, Israel's closest Muslim ally.

    Despite the shift on the genocide question, Foxman says he still does
    not support the legislative measure, which he described in his
    Tuesday statement as "a counterproductive diversion" that could
    threaten the Turkish Jewish community and "the important multilateral
    position between Turkey, Israel and the United States."

    That position is exceedingly unpopular in Boston, where a large
    Armenian population has developed close ties with the Jewish
    community. The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston,
    the Combined Jewish Philanthropies, the David Project and eight other
    groups signed on to a "community statement" Monday urging the ADL to
    reconsider its position.

    "I think what Andy Tarsy did was to express the morally correct
    position, speaking not only as a leader of the ADL but as a Jew whose
    history in the last century was formed by a Holocaust," Steven
    Grossman, a former chairman of the American Israel Public Affairs
    Committee and the Democratic National Committee, said.

    http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/13846/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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