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Local Group Weighs ADL Move

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  • Local Group Weighs ADL Move

    LOCAL GROUP WEIGHS ADL MOVE
    By Christian Schiavone

    Acton-The Beacon, MA
    GateHouse News Service
    Aug 30 2007

    Acton, Mass. -
    Members of the Acton No Place for Hate group were poised earlier
    this week to become the second such group in the state to cut their
    ties to the Anti-Defamation League because of the League's refusal
    to acknowledge the killing of over a million Armenians as genocide.

    The decision came just hours before the ADL issued a statement
    reversing its position and using the word "genocide" to refer to the
    massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Muslim Turks following
    World War I.

    The controversy began two weeks ago when the town councilors in
    Watertown, which has a large Armenian population, voted to end the
    town's participation in the No Place for Hate program because of the
    ADL's stance on the issue. Days later, the ADL fired its New England
    regional director, Andrew Tarsy, for breaking with the policy by
    saying the killings amounted to genocide.

    Tarsy was rehired on Monday.

    Acton would have been the second town to cut its ties to the ADL,
    a national organization that fights discrimination.

    "We really felt like it was important for ethical reasons to take
    a stand," said Lauren Gilman, one of three co-chairs the Acton's No
    Place for Hate group.

    Gilman said group members had been uneasy with the ADL's position
    on the Armenian genocide before, but felt that because their group's
    efforts are locally focused that they could continue their affiliation.

    "When it got to the point that the regional director took a stand
    and got fired, we thought it had gone to far," said Gilman.

    Gilman and the other members agreed to draft a letter formally seeking
    to suspend their affiliation with the ADL until the League changed its
    position. Gilman said the group would not go forward with suspending
    their affiliation because of the change in policy.

    The ADL had previously condemned the killings of Armenians as an
    atrocity, but stopped short of calling it genocide.

    Following a wave of outcry after Tarsy's dismissal highlighted the
    issue, Abraham Foxman, the ADL's national director, issued a statement
    Tuesday reversing the League's position.

    "[T]he consequences of those actions were indeed tantamount to
    genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they would have
    called it genocide," he wrote.

    Foxman added, however, that the ADL does not support a congressional
    resolution to recognize the killings as genocide, citing risks to
    the relationship between Turkey, the United States and Israel that
    such a move could create.

    State Rep. Jamie Eldridge, D-Acton, who is a second co-chair of the
    local No Place for Hate group and a candidate in the race for the
    5th Congressional District, said if elected, he would support such
    a resolution.

    "Any holocaust, any genocide needs to be recognized so it never happens
    again," said Eldridge, pointing to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, and
    the current mass killings in the Sudan. "I really felt like we had
    to take a stand."

    While Acton does not have a large Armenian population, Eldridge said
    it was important for the town to push for recognition of the massacres
    of Armenians as genocide.

    "It's an important issue for any community that's committed to civil
    rights," he said.

    Eldridge also praised Tarsy for breaking ADL policy regarding the
    massacres of Armenians.

    Acton's No Place for Hate group holds an annual Martin Luther King
    Day breakfast, and has worked to highlight the needs of the town's
    growing Brazilian population.

    Gilman said that the work of the Acton group, which has been in
    existence for about five years, is important as the town's population
    becomes more diverse.

    "I've seen huge change in terms of the community and languages I hear
    just standing in line at the grocery store," she said.

    http://www.townonline.com/acton/homepage/x1 136425708
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