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Fallout From ADL's Position Elicits International Response

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  • Fallout From ADL's Position Elicits International Response

    FALLOUT FROM ADL'S POSITION ELICITS INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE
    By Raphael Kohan

    The Jewish Advocate, MA
    Aug 30 2007

    Andrew H. Tarsy
    Turkey calls on Israel to keep Jewish organizations in line

    Now that the Anti-Defamation League has reinstated Andrew H. Tarsy
    to its New England Region, ADL leaders say they want to move past the
    issues that have divided them in recent weeks, even as the organization
    is faced with international fallout.

    "The ADL has confronted a very important issue and done a significant
    thing for acknowledging the Armenian genocide," said Tarsy in a
    meeting on Monday with the Advocate and Abraham H. Foxman, ADL's
    national director. "But now we go forward."

    Foxman fired Tarsy on Aug. 17 after he spoke out publicly against
    ADL's official position at the time.

    The events of the past month, which stemmed from a debate surrounding
    recognition of the Armenian massacres during World War I as genocide,
    have raised serious questions about the relationships of local
    chapters to national organizations, as well as the relationships of
    morally-concerned American Jews to the political realities facing
    the state of Israel and the Jewish Diaspora.

    "It's a much bigger issue than the community here may realize," said
    Foxman. "These are two moral imperatives that come into conflict,
    and one has to make a choice."

    Upon learning of Foxman's reversal on the term "genocide" last week,
    diplomatic officials in Jerusalem expressed disbelief, the Jerusalem
    Post reported. One senior Foreign Ministry official even declined to
    comment because he did not believe the authenticity of the statement.

    One of the issues the controversy highlights is how Boston Jews
    overwhelmingly responded in support of Tarsy and recognizing the
    Armenian genocide, regardless of what political repercussions may
    follow in the Middle East.

    "It is relatively easy to say this in Massachusetts, bordered by
    Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York,"
    reporter Herb Keinon wrote in the Jerusalem Post. "American Jews can
    take the high moral ground on issues such as these, because there is
    no real consequence; they don't have to pay any tangible cost."

    Consul General of Israel to New England Nadav Tamir said there is an
    understandable difference between policy-makers in the Jewish state
    and Jewish organizational heads in the Bay State.

    "They have their own interests and issues," Tamir said of American
    Jewish groups. "Sometime they have to be more ideological. They don't
    have realpolitik like countries have."

    Even as the ADL has held steadfast that a congressional resolution
    on the genocide would prove "counterproductive," Turkish officials
    have been angered by the human rights organization's shift last week.

    "Turkey expressed chagrin that we had to take sides on this issue,"
    said Foxman. "How would you feel if you woke up in the morning and the
    newspaper headline read, 'Jewish lobby stabs Turkey in the back?'"
    The question remains, however, of how an organization's ideological
    stance impacts another country's political agreements, like the
    Turkish-Israeli alliance, which is precisely what seems to be hanging
    in the balance.

    Foxman's reversal set off alarm bells in Turkey that not even
    statements reinforcing Israel's unchanged position on genocide
    recognition could pacify.

    Turkish Ambassador to Israel Namik Tan, who cut short his summer
    vacation after learning of ADL's position change, told the Jerusalem
    Post: "Israel should not let the [U.S.] Jewish community change its
    position. This is our expectation and this is highly important."

    Despite the role of American Jewish organizations in lobbying on
    Israel's behalf, the Jewish state does not set their agenda, according
    to Tamir.

    "They're not getting dictates from Israel," he said. "We will try to
    explain to the Turks that Jewish organizations are not representing
    the Israeli government necessarily."

    For all the international implications encompassed by the events
    of the last few weeks, Jonathan Sarna, professor of American Jewish
    History at Brandeis University, said there may be fallout that also
    impacts the dynamic of Jewish organizational life.

    "This will be remembered as a very unusual episode where a rebellious
    chapter managed to transform the parent organization," said Sarna.

    "My sense is we'll see other examples of chapters rebelling in
    different ways against the dictates of the center."

    Yet others maintain it is precisely the international relationships
    fostered by a national headquarters that allow it to be best informed
    on diplomatic concerns, which fall outside the jurisdiction of local
    chapters.

    "The issue for the ADL is not whether or not there was genocide against
    the Armenians - there clearly was," Grand Rabbi Y. A. Korff said in
    a statement. "Rather the real issue for the ADL is, after considering
    all the complexities, competing interests, and the consequences, what
    their official policy should be and how, or by whom, that decision
    should be made."

    With Foxman expressing one view and local Jewish groups expressing
    another, the national ADL head said the public attacks against him
    and ADL proved most upsetting to him.

    "I found it personally disheartening that good people in the Jewish
    community were not willing to give us the benefit of the doubt that
    we were acting in good faith in the best interest of the Jewish
    community," said Foxman.

    For now, Foxman and Tarsy are both looking to put this ordeal behind
    them so they can move forward in promoting new initiatives on the
    organization's agenda.

    "I hope it will be a learning experience for us all," said Foxman.

    "We paid a high price for it, but it brings the community a better
    understanding of what's at stake."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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