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Mazzaglia: Rethink the Armenian genocide

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  • Mazzaglia: Rethink the Armenian genocide

    Milford Daily News, MA
    Daily News Tribune, MA
    MetroWest Daily News, MA
    Aug 5 2007

    Mazzaglia: Rethink the Armenian genocide


    By Frank Mazzaglia/Local columnist
    GHS
    Sun Aug 05, 2007, 12:21 AM EDT


    An unlikely squabble broke out last week between Watertown's Armenian
    community and the Anti-Defamation League. This is what happened.

    Along with scores of other cities and towns, Watertown proclaimed
    itself a "No Place for Hate" community back in 2005. The idea, of
    course, was to promote public policy against discrimination. Indeed,
    Watertown is one of the most densely populated communities in the
    Commonwealth. It is also home to the state's largest Armenian
    concentration. Closely built houses encourage neighborliness. Still,
    there is genuine anger out there.

    It turns out that the Anti-Defamation League, which sponsors "No
    Place for Hate," refuses to acknowledge a dark period from 1915 to
    1923. That's when the Turkish army implemented a policy of ethnic
    cleansing and mercilessly murdered an estimated 1.5 million helpless
    Armenian civilians. Turkey's subsequent denial of having anything to
    do with the Armenian genocide caused Hitler himself to believe he
    could get away with the ruthless slaughter of Jews which we now know
    as the Holocaust.

    Leaders of Watertown's Armenian community want to maintain the "No
    Place for Hate" program but are lobblying to separate its connection
    with the ADL.

    Mark me down as one who believes that there is real danger in looking
    the other way when any nation attempts to cover up shameful episodes
    of its past. Japan attempted to do that by changing school textbooks
    and omitting its unspeakable attrocities in China and Korea.

    Modern China, too, gets more than a bit touchy when the subject of
    Tibet comes up.

    Turkey's refusal to accept any responsibility for its past history
    against the Armenian people, however, gets a bit more problematic
    because of its political and strategic importance. Even the United
    States drags its feet when it comes to Turkey. It's more in our
    interest to be concerned about the present and the future than to
    dwell on the past.

    Still, there are some of us who get very angry with anyone who denies
    the Holocaust. That's why the ADL's position, or rather lack of
    position, about the Armenian genocide just doesn't make sense.

    Founded in 1913 to fight anti-Semitism, the ADL has taken risky
    positions which have done us all proud. The ADL condemned the
    senseless killings in Darfur and the genocide in the Balkans. That's
    part of the problem. There's nothing 'selective' about genocide. It's
    wrong to condemn one genocide and turn a blind eye to another.

    Following World War II, a huge wave of anger was directed against
    Pope Pius XII for his 'silence' during the Holocaust. Some still seem
    to think the Swiss Guard could have been a real match against the SS.
    Dan Kurzman's new book "A Special Mission," however, reveals evidence
    concerning a secret Nazi plot in which Hitler planned to kidnap and
    then kill Pope Pius XII precisely because he was aiding and abetting
    Jews whenever and wherever he could. Notwithstanding Kurzman's
    evidence, there has been no apology for the defamation.

    The real problem comes right down to money. To acknowledge its past
    would mean that Turkey would have to pay compensation to Armenians
    who suffered under the genocide in the same way the German government
    was required to compensate the victims of its Nazi past.

    The sad fact remains that no amount of compensation could ever be
    enough for what Jews and Armenians have suffered at the hands of
    morally sick tyrants.

    Sadder yet is the growing conflict between two groups that have both
    experienced the terrible result of senseless hatred and intolerance.
    In the end, the ADL's refusal to support the truth about the Armenian
    genocide places a serious dent in its own integrity. That's why it
    makes sense for the ADL to re-think its position. It's too important
    an organization to risk losing its moral authority.

    The faster wise minds come to that conclusion, the better it will be
    for us all.

    Frank Mazzaglia can be reached at [email protected]

    http://www.milforddailynews.co m/opinion/x510835716
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