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  • Armenian `genocide' mission sparks dispute

    Jewish Chronicle , UK
    Aug 24 2007


    Armenian `genocide' mission sparks dispute

    24/08/2007
    By Bernard Josephs


    A British Liberal rabbi is to travel to Armenia to pay tribute to the
    victims of the Armenian genocide carried out by the Ottoman Turks,
    despite fears expressed by Jewish leaders that his plan could
    complicate relations between Israel and Turkey.

    Rabbi Danny Rich, chief executive of Liberal Judaism, told the JC he
    had called on Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks, the Reform Movement and
    the Board of Deputies to send representatives on the trip next week,
    during which he plans to plant a tree at the genocide memorial in the
    Armenian capital of Yerevan.

    However, he said he had received no response.

    A source, whom he declined to name, `warned me off, saying I should
    not be asking people to come with me because of the situation between
    Israel and Turkey'. Turkey - one of Israel's closest allies in the
    Middle East - is known to be acutely sensitive about the Armenian
    massacre, in which over one million people were slaughtered around
    the time of the First World War.

    `It would have been better if the Jewish community as a whole had
    been represented: instead I will be taking a small group from the
    Liberal Synagogue. The Armenian genocide was horrific. By 1923,
    virtually the entire Armenian population of Anatolian Turkey had been
    `cleansed'. Jewish history reminds us of the importance of
    remembrance, and the ethical imperative of Judaism says that the pain
    of one people ought to be the tragedy of all peoples.'

    A spokesperson for the Chief Rabbi denied any knowledge of Rabbi
    Rich's initiative. Reform's Rabbi Tony Bayfield said he was `very
    sympathetic' to the move, but added: `There are complex political
    issues relating to Israel and its relations with Turkey. I would be
    loath to do anything without the support of the Board of Deputies.'
    Board president Henry Grunwald said he too was aware of political
    considerations but hoped the visit would `go very well'. A row over
    whether or not the Armenian deaths should be categorised as genocide
    erupted this week when the New York-based Anti-Defamation League
    fired one of its directors, Andrew Tarsy, for backing a Congressional
    resolution on the subject. Later, Abe Foxman, national director of
    the ADL, reversed the position and said he did believe that a
    genocide had taken place - but Mr Tarsy still lost his job.

    http://www.thejc.com/home.aspx?ParentId=m11s18&a mp;SecId=18&AId=54822&ATypeId=1
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