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ANCEM: Genocide Denial Fuels Concerns about NPFH Program

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  • ANCEM: Genocide Denial Fuels Concerns about NPFH Program

    Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts
    47 Nichols Avenue
    Watertown, MA 02472
    [email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE
    August 7, 2007
    Contact: Sevag Arzoumanian
    Tel: 617-233-3174

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIAL FUELS BOSTON AREA CONCERNS SURROUNDING
    LOCAL TOLERANCE PROGRAM

    -- Watertown "No Place for Hate" Program Urged to Sever Ties with
    ADL, Following Genocide Denial Remarks by National Director Abe
    Foxman

    WATERTOWN, MA - Boston area civil rights advocates have teamed with
    Armenian and Jewish American community activists in expressing
    disappointment and outrage at recent statements by Anti-Defamation
    League (ADL) National Director Abraham Foxman denying the Armenian
    Genocide and opposing Congressional legislation affirming that
    crime against humanity, reported the Armenian National Committee of
    Eastern Massachusetts (ANCEM). Foxman's statements have seriously
    jeopardized the credibility of the Watertown "No Place For Hate"
    (NPFH) anti-racism and tolerance promotion program, with pressure
    mounting on its leadership to sever ties with its parent
    organization, the ADL.

    The controversy first came to light on July 6th when the Watertown
    Tab published a letter by an Armenian American citizen that
    spotlighted Foxman's recent statements opposing Congressional
    Armenian Genocide legislation. The letter asked the local "No Place
    For Hate" chapter to disassociate itself from the ADL.

    Foxman's statements were from an April 21st Los Angeles Times
    article titled "Genocide Resolution Still Far from Certain" in
    which Foxman argued that "The Turks and Armenians need to revisit
    their past. The Jewish community shouldn't be the arbiter of that
    history. And I don't think the U.S. Congress should be the arbiter
    either." The July 6th letter spurred a flurry of responses from
    Armenian Americans and others that were printed in the Watertown
    Tab. One letter, from New England ADL Regional Director Andrew
    Tarsy, defended Foxman, but was subsequently countered by a series
    of articles by local columnists Frank Mazzaglia, John DiMascio and
    community citizens expressing concerns about a loss of credibility
    by NPFH if it continued its association with genocide deniers.

    In a letter to the Watertown Tab, ANCEM chairperson Sharistan
    Melkonian wrote, "Foxman's use of euphemistic language to deny the
    Armenian Genocide runs counter to the fundamental tenets of No
    Place for Hate... and also runs counter to the ADL's own charter,
    which, according to the ADL's Website, states that the ADL's
    `ultimate purpose is to secure justice and fair treatment to all
    citizens alike and to put an end forever to unjust and unfair
    discrimination against and ridicule of any sect or body of
    citizens.'"

    "For the parent organization of No Place of Hate, or rather the
    national director of that organization, to deny genocide, goes
    against the basic concepts of tolerance and respect for diversity
    the organization is working so hard to promote in our communities,"
    continued Melkonian.

    -------------------------------------- -----------------------------
    Boston Globe Documents Genocide Denial Concerns
    ----------------------------------------- --------------------------

    The situation intensified after an August 1st article in the Boston
    Globe, titled "Anti-Bias Effort Stirs Anger in Watertown," where
    Foxman, again, in reference to Armenian Genocide recognition
    efforts, stated "We're not party to this, and I don't understand
    why we need to be made party." In response to a direct question by
    reporter Keith O'Brien whether "what happened to Armenians under
    the Ottoman Empire was genocide, he [Foxman] replied, 'I don't
    know.'" He went on to note that "'I'm not going to be the arbiter
    of someone else's history,'" . . . adding that he does not believe
    that Congress should either."

    In her interview with the Globe's O'Brien, Melkonian condemned
    Foxman's genocide denial and stated that the ANC EM would "call for
    the Watertown 'No Place for Hate' program to sever its ties with
    the ADL unless it denounces Foxman's position and acknowledges the
    genocide."

    Watertown's NPFH Co-Chairman Will Twombly, in response to O'Brien's
    inquiries, stated that "Not to condemn the genocide and fully
    recognize it for what it was, I personally find inconsistent with
    the mission of No Place for Hate." He noted that his group would be
    asking "tough questions" of the New England ADL's Tarsy. "At that
    point, Twombly said, the committee will decide on the best course
    of action, including the option of severing ties with the ADL
    altogether, effectively ending the program."

    In a subsequent August 3rd editorial, the Boston Globe called on
    the ADL to "acknowledge the genocide against the Armenian people
    during World War I, and criticize Turkish attempts to repress the
    memory of this historical reality." Citing Israel's close ties with
    Turkey, the editorial countered that "the ADL is not an arm of
    Israel, and whatever it does will not affect Turkish foreign
    policy." The editorial concluded, noting "failure to acknowledge
    past atrocities will encourage would-be perpetrators to believe
    they can get away with them, just as the Ottoman Empire did."

    -------------------------------------- -----------------------------
    Jewish American Leaders / Activists Speak Out Against Genocide
    Denial
    ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------

    Amongst key community leaders joining the Armenian American
    community in expressing concern about Foxman's genocide denial and
    its repercussions on the "No Place for Hate" program are Jewish
    American academics and organization leaders. In a letter to the
    Boston Globe, Jewish Voice for Peace - Boston Co-Chair Martin
    Federman noted that "Abraham Foxman's contention that his Anti-
    Defamation League (ADL) should not be the 'arbiter of history' by
    acknowledging the historicity of the Armenian Genocide is at best
    disingenuous, at worst craven self-interest." Federman argued that
    "if anyone were to sidestep the issue of whether the Holocaust
    really happened, by refusing to be the 'arbiter of history', Foxman
    and the ADL would (appropriately) be apoplectic."

    In a press release issued on August 5th, Boston University
    Professor Michael Siegel condemned the ADL's genocide denial and
    urged Watertown 'No Place for Hate' to "sever its ties with the ADL
    unless the organization acknowledges that this genocide occurred."
    A public letter from Siegel to New England ADL Regional Director
    Andrew Tarsy stated "As a long-time ADL supporter, it is with great
    disappointment that I write you today to express my disgust with
    your organization's refusal to publicly acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide, and in particular, your July 26 response to the recent
    controversy in Watertown, in which you refused to acknowledge the
    genocide, and instead, stated that the question of whether a
    genocide occurred: " was one to be resolved between the two
    countries -- Armenia and Turkey."

    Similar statements of outrage have been spotlighted on a number of
    blogs, including articles by the Huffington Post's Mark Oppenheimer
    and Jewcy's Joey Kurtzman. Oppenheimer, in a July 10th post, argued
    that "for a non-profit like the ADL, which in fact has done
    important work to combat not just anti-Semitism but other forms of
    ethnocentrism and racism, to shill for Holocaust-deniers (yes, the
    Armenian genocide can fairly be called a Holocaust) is inexcusable.
    He should be fired." Kurtzman stated that "It is a scandal of
    unprecedented proportion when one of the most prominent figures in
    our community, a man who claims to speak on our behalf, publicly
    challenges the historicity of another community's genocide.
    Foxman's ADL no longer represents the interests of the Jewish
    community."

    ------------------------- ------------------------------------------
    ANCEM APPEALS TO NPFH
    --------------------------------------------- ----------------------

    In an August 3rd letter to No Place for Hate Watertown, the ANCEM
    noted that "affiliation or acquiescence with Mr. Foxman's
    unconscionable position on the Armenian Genocide seriously
    undermines the efforts of the NPFH - a leader in the fight against
    bigotry and intolerance in Watertown.' The letter went on to urge
    the NPFH to call on Foxman to `publicly and unequivocally renounce
    its [ADL's] denialist agenda.'

    An ANCEM sponsored community petition called on No Place for Hate
    "in keeping with its principles" to " issue a public statement
    opposing Turkey's state-sponsored campaign to deny the Armenian
    Genocide and call on NPFH sponsor, the Anti-Defamation League
    (ADL), through its National Director Abraham Foxman, to openly and
    unequivocally acknowledge the Armenian Genocide and support
    Congressional affirmation of this crime against humanity."

    Within days, the petition gathered over 300 hundred signatures. To
    learn more about the Foxman/ADL genocide denial controversy visit:
    www.noplacefordenial.com

    "No Place for Hate" is a community-based campaign established by
    the Anti-Defamation League geared to bring awareness to and fights
    against anti-Semitism, racism and all other forms of bigotry. Some
    50 cities throughout Massachusetts are termed "No Place for Hate"
    zones, and participation is growing throughout the United States,
    including: Austin, TX; Denver, CO; Houston, TX; Las Vegas, NV; Los
    Angeles, CA; New York, NY; Omaha, NE; Philadelphia, PA; and Santa
    Barbara, CA, among other cities.

    The Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts is part of
    the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots
    political organization. Working in coordination with a network of
    offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the United States and
    affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively
    advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad
    range of issues.
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