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  • Jewish, Armenian leaders strive for healing

    Jewish, Armenian leaders strive for healing

    By April Simpson, Globe Staff | August 30, 2007

    Political and religious leaders from the Jewish and Armenian
    communities will launch a concerted effort today to heal rifts opened
    by complaints that the Anti-Defamation League did not recognize
    Armenian genocide.

    The leaders will join survivors of both the Jewish and Armenian
    genocides in a display of solidarity at the State House this
    afternoon. Organizers said they want to send a message that the
    slaughter of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks in 1915 is
    acknowledged by many Jews as genocide, despite decades of refusal to
    do so by the ADL.

    "In our community we use the phrase, 'never again and never forget,'
    and that doesn't just refer to the Jewish community," said Councilor
    Michael P. Ross, a member of the Boston City Council who organized the
    event with state Representative Rachel Kaprielian of Watertown. "It
    refers to the acknowledgment of all humanity and all genocide and all
    intolerance. So it's very important that we show the Armenian
    community that there's support."

    It's an important step, organizers said. "The most significant way to
    stop genocide is to acknowledge it," said Representative Peter J.
    Koutoujian of Newton, a Democrat whose grandparents immigrated to the
    United States from Armenia to flee the massacres there.

    The ADL found itself embroiled in controversy after the Town Council
    in Watertown -- home to one of the largest concentrations of
    Armenian-Americans in the United States, with about 8,000 -- voted
    this month to withdraw from the league's No Place for Hate program.
    Watertown officials cited the league's refusal to recognize the
    Armenian genocide.

    When the ADL's regional executive director, Andrew H. Tarsy, defied
    the national organization and publicly acknowledged the genocide, he
    was fired. Then this week the ADL's national leader, Abraham H.
    Foxman, reinstated Tarsy and acknowledged that the mass killings were
    genocide.

    Today's press conference at 5:30 on the State House steps is intended
    to soothe ongoing animosities. But Watertown officials, citing ongoing
    ADL resistance to an Armenian genocide resolution in Congress, said
    they are not prepared to rejoin No Place for Hate.

    Clyde L. Younger, president of the Watertown Town Council, said that
    he will work to continue a similar program under a different name and
    that he plans to contact local civic organizations and students for
    help.

    So far, the Town Council does not intend to rejoin the ADL program, he
    said, because the league must do more to support the Armenian
    community, including encouraging Congress to pass a genocide
    resolution.

    "That's one reason why we revoked our association with the ADL,"
    Younger said. "They've done some wonderful things in the past . . .
    but what has happened now is a very significant issue for this
    community."

    Another council member, Angeline B. Kounelis, said Watertown will
    continue as a tolerant and diverse community without the ADL program.

    "The town of Watertown, the councilors, have enough to do without
    having to delve into the national and international politics of the
    ADL," Kounelis said.

    Foxman, the ADL national director, maintained this week that the
    genocide was an issue that Turkey and Armenia should address, not
    anyone else.

    Kaprielian said her Watertown constituents are deeply troubled by the
    ADL's refusal to support the congressional resolution.

    She said many people in her community know Armenian genocide
    survivors. The league's acknowledgement of the genocide is a step in
    the right direction, she said.

    "To have that wholesale affirmation as we feel we've gotten has been a
    positive turn of events on an otherwise bleak subject," Kaprielian
    said.

    Steve Grossman, a former ADL board member and a recognized leader in
    the Jewish community, said today's event will confirm ties between the
    groups.

    "Both of our peoples have been through genocides in the 20th century,"
    he said, "and those experiences bind us more closely than ever
    before."

    April Simpson can be reached at [email protected].

    (c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

    Source: http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/08/ 30/jewish_armenian_leaders_strive_for_healing/
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