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ADL woes in Watertown lead to Turkey-Israel Drama

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  • ADL woes in Watertown lead to Turkey-Israel Drama

    MidEastYouth.com
    Aug 23 2007


    ADL woes in Watertown lead to Turkey-Israel Drama


    Miriam (Egypt/Israel/USA)
    August 23rd, 2007
    Who knew my little hometown would cause such a ruckus?

    The No Place For Hate controversy has some very unexpected ripple
    effects, including the firing of the New England head of the ADL by
    the head honcho Abe Foxman because he dared to acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide (Foxman has only said the events are `tantamount to
    genocide) and surrounding towns like Arlington, MA also ousting the
    No Place For Hate program affiliation from their town.

    But now the repercussions have become international. The Jerusalem
    Post today reports that Turkey has sent its ambassador to Israel back
    to work early to resolve tensions with the ADL.

    So, here are the had gadya-like sequentials: Israel is supported by
    the ADL who didn't acknowledge the genocide and then sort of did,
    whereupon Turkey was offended:

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry statement said that to describe the
    events during WWI as `genocide' was `without historical and legal
    basis,' and that contrary to the ADL's claim, there was no consensus
    on this matter among historians.

    `We see this statement as an unfortunate one that is unjust to the
    Holocaust, which has no precedent, and to its victims. And we expect
    it to be corrected,' the statement read.

    Thank you, but no thank you, Turkey. It's nice that you'd like to
    pretend that your ire has something to do with respecting the
    suffering of the Holocaust, but Israel has publicly acknowledged its
    own commiseration with the Armenians that comes out of empathy with
    them. So no deal.

    I had a very personal look at the inside of this Turkish-Armenian and
    now Turkish-Armenian-Jewish-Israeli issue as a student in the same
    department as Fatma Muge Gocek, one of the few Turkish Scholars to
    acknowledge the suffering of the Armenian people. She is quoted as
    saying the following in 2006 on the anniversary commemorating the
    genocide:

    I want you to know that as an ethnic Turk I am not guilty, but I am
    responsible for the wounds that have been inflicted upon you,
    Armenians, for the last century and a half. I am responsible for the
    wounds that were first delivered upon you through an unjust
    deportation from your ancestral lands and through massacres in the
    hands of a government that should have been there to protect you. I
    am also responsible for the wounds caused by the Turkish state's
    denial to this day of what happened to you back then. I am
    responsible because all of this occurred and still occurs in the
    country of which I am a citizen. Yet I want to tell you that I
    personally travel every year to your ancestral lands to envision what
    was once there and what is not now. When I am there, I realize again
    and again how much your departure has broken the human spirit and
    warped the land and the people. I become more and more aware of the
    darkness that has set in since the disappearance of so many lives,
    minds, hopes and dreams.

    I'd really like to hear what any of our Turkish bloggers think about
    all this.

    As an endnote, I am still torn that some of the most vocal resistance
    to the ADL's program comes from a very HATEFUL group of Watertown
    citizens who post on the blog Mass Resistance whose initial
    opposition to No Place For Hate came from their own homophobia and
    very intolerant, right-wing attitudes.

    http://www.mideastyouth.com/2007/08/23 /adl-woes-in-watertown-lead-to-turkey-israel-drama /
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