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  • ADL opinion on Armenian Genocide called 'good news'

    MetroWest Daily News, MA
    Aug 22 2007


    ADL opinion on Armenian Genocide called 'good news'


    By Peter Reuell/Daily News Staff
    GHS
    Wed Aug 22, 2007, 10:00 AM EDT

    Local rabbis and Jewish community leaders yesterday applauded the
    national Anti-Defamation League's acknowledgement of the World War
    I-era Armenian Genocide, but said the reversal of its previous stance
    raises as many questions as it answers.

    The hope by many is that the acknowledgment, released yesterday
    afternoon on the ADL's Web site, will defuse a brewing controversy
    that led to the firing of ADL New England Director Andrew Tarsy and
    the resignation of several local board members.

    "I think that's very good news," Patty Jacobson, vice president of
    marketing at the Combined Jewish Philanthropies, said of the
    organization's statement. "I think language matters and is very
    important, and I'm very glad to see it happen."

    The controversy that spurred the ADL to change its position began
    last week, when Watertown officials voted to pull out of the ADL's
    "No Place for Hate" education program, citing the organization's
    refusal to recognize the Armenian Genocide. The New York-based
    organization had called the deaths of up 1.5 million Armenians at the
    hands of Muslim Turks between 1915 and 1923 an atrocity, but stopped
    short of saying it was genocide - a planned extermination of the
    Christian Armenian minority.

    Watertown's Armenian population is estimated at about 8,000.

    Following the vote, Tarsy described what happened to the Armenians in
    the time around the First World War as a genocide. His break with the
    national ADL leaders led to his firing, which prompted at least two
    New England board members to resign in protest.

    But while the national organization's reversal on the genocide seems
    to lay one issue to rest, the question of Tarsy's future with the ADL
    remains.

    It is a question many local Jewish leaders found tough to answer.

    "I have the utmost in respect for our regional officers of the ADL
    and for Andy personally," said Rabbi David Widzer of Franklin's
    Temple Etz Chaim. "I don't know that I really have a comment on what
    happens next. The national ADL and the regional ADL and Andy have
    some potential difficult conversations to have or processes to work
    through."

    Harold Kushner, rabbi laureate of Temple Israel in Natick, yesterday
    said he always supported recognizing the Armenian Genocide, and
    believes the ADL should welcome Tarsy back to the fold.

    "If I were them, I would take him back," he said. "How one does this
    and saves face, I don't know, but I would take him back.

    "When you are an organization that stands for a moral cause, it is
    never a mistake to do the morally right thing."

    For area Armenians, the hope is that finally acknowledging the
    genocide can lead to healing.

    "It did happen, and it unfortunately has festered and remained
    unrecognized for these 90 years," said Martin Deranian, a Worcester
    dentist. "I believe the time has come for society to bring this to
    attention. From a moral, historical point of view, it's highly
    appropriate" to recognize it.

    U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-4th, a co-sponsor of the Armenian Genocide
    bill, said he was disappointed with ADL National Director Abraham
    Foxman's previous position.

    "I think they made a mistake," Frank said. "I am very disappointed
    with the national ADL, and I am proud of New England's reaction."

    The House resolution calls on the president to ensure that U.S.
    foreign policy "reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity
    concerning issues related to ... genocide documented in the United
    States record relating to the Armenian Genocide."

    Fellow House member Rep. Edward Markey, D-6th, a co-sponsor on the
    House resolution, said he believed the ADL had "taken a substantive
    and significant step today."

    "Simply put, ADL's decision to recognize the reality of the Armenian
    Genocide reflects the best traditions of the organization and its
    charter," Markey said.

    Following Tarsy's firing, Jacobson said she hopes the ADL's reversal
    will bring some healing to the organization.

    "Obviously, all of us here feel that the change in the position ...
    is the right decision for the national ADL to take," she said.
    "There's lots of work to do and as a community we need to focus on
    how best to do that work and how best to move forward.

    "I think this whole situation is a real blow to the regional ADL,"
    she said. "I think regardless of who leads the regional ADL going
    forward, there's going to be some serious fence mending that needs to
    take place."

    As troubling as the controversy has been, though, Widzer takes some
    comfort in the time of year.

    "Whatever the ultimate resolution that comes, I am mindful that this
    season of the year on the Jewish calendar (High Holy Days) is the
    time of teshuvah," he said. "The fancy, five-dollar word for that is
    repentance. But it's more the season of the year where we can look
    back on what, in the past year, hasn't gone the way we wanted it to
    and what are the steps we can take to correct it.

    "I can't speak to what any of the interested parties would do, but
    that's the season of the year we find ourselves in. I would hope some
    sort of reconciliation or being able to move forward amicably would
    happen."

    (Peter Reuell can be reached at 508-626-4428, or at [email protected].)

    (Material from the Associated Press was used in this report)
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