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Armenians In Mass. Town Slam ADL Over Alleged Genocide Denials

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  • Armenians In Mass. Town Slam ADL Over Alleged Genocide Denials

    ARMENIANS IN MASS. TOWN SLAM ADL OVER ALLEGED GENOCIDE DENIALS
    By Ben Harris

    Jewish Review, OR
    http://www.jewishreview.org/Archives/Article.ph p?Article=2007-08-01-3569
    Aug 9 2007

    NEW YORK (JTA)-A small, local protest against an Anti-Defamation
    League program in the Boston suburbs is shining a spotlight on the
    American Jewish community's refusal to get behind a congressional
    bill acknowledging the Armenian genocide.

    Introduced in Congress in 2005, the bill states that the Ottoman
    Empire massacred 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923,
    and calls on the president of the United States to recognize the
    killings as genocide. The measure is being vigorously opposed by
    Turkey, Israel's closest ally in the Muslim world, which has enlisted
    a number of high-profile Washington lobbyists-including several with
    ties to Jewish groups-to press its case.

    The Anti-Defamation League, along with B'nai B'rith International,
    American Jewish Committee and the Jewish Institute of National Security
    Affairs, say they are not taking a position on the bill. At the same
    time, however, they are echoing the Turkish line that the debate over
    what happened should be settled by historians, not American lawmakers;
    also, earlier this year, the four groups passed along to congressional
    leaders a letter from Turkish Jews opposing the resolution.

    Until now, the consequences of such steps have been limited to a
    few critical articles, including a polemic entitled "Fire Foxman,"
    published on the Web magazine Jewcy.com. But now, anger over what some
    perceive as the ADL's pandering to Turkey, is threatening to derail
    efforts by the organization to bring its highly regarded anti-bigotry
    program to Watertown.

    The Armenian community of Watertown, Mass.-one of the largest in the
    country-is threatening to shut down the local "No Place for Hate"
    program, an ADL-sponsored initiative to certify communities that
    sponsor educational programs celebrating diversity.

    "Here in Watertown, you can't ignore the Armenian genocide," said
    Ruth Thomasian, the sole Armenian member of Watertown's "No Place for
    Hate" planning committee, which operates independently of ADL. "You
    can't call it ‛alleged' or ‛supposed' or ‛research
    says.' Genocide happened."

    The controversy began a month ago with a letter to the local
    weekly newspaper in Watertown, a community of some 32,000 people,
    of which as many as 20 percent are of Armenian descent. The letter,
    which called for the committee to sever ties with the ADL, sparked a
    flurry of responses; soon after, the controversy was the subject of
    a front-page story in the Boston Globe.

    "The Armenian community in Watertown is a very important part of the
    fabric of the town," said Will Twombly, the co-chair of the planning
    committee. "Needless to say, when this letter appeared in the newspaper
    lots of people had concerns about the issue, and questions as well."

    "This is not an issue where we take a position one way or the other,"
    Foxman told JTA, referring to the longstanding feud between Turkey and
    Armenians over the issue. "This is an issue that needs to be resolved
    by the parties, not by us. We are neither historians nor arbiters."

    Earlier this year, a delegation of Turkish Jews visiting Washington
    warned Jewish leaders that a resolution could harm Turkey's tilt
    towards the West and create problems for the country's Jews. Some
    20,000 Jews live in Turkey, where a community has flourished for
    hundreds of years.

    Though Jewish organizational leaders would not confirm that either the
    safety of Turkish Jews or the alliance with Israel factored into their
    position, Turkish Jewish leaders explicitly linked Israel's well-being
    to the defeat of the resolution. In their letter to congressional
    leaders, the Turkish Jews noted the importance of close ties between
    Israel, the United States and Turkey, before warning that passage of
    the resolution could endanger American interests.

    Around the same time, Foxman spoke out explicitly against the
    congressional resolution, saying it is not the job of Congress to
    settle the question. Foxman also asserted that, while massacres
    of Armenians undoubtedly did take place, the jury is still out on
    whether those massacres qualify as genocide. Such questioning has
    been rejected by Armenians as flat out wrong and described by scholars
    as disingenuous.

    "It's not a matter of debate," said Deborah Lipstadt, a Holocaust
    scholar at Emory University. "There is an overwhelming consensus
    among historians that work in this area that there is no question
    that this is a genocide. You can't deny this history."

    Joey Kurtzman, the author of the Jewcy article, told JTA that Jewish
    organizations should be "visible and vocal in standing with the
    Armenian community."

    "Unless Jewish Americans are comfortable for others to remain
    similarly agnostic about whether the Holocaust took place, we ought
    to be every bit as furious with Foxman as are Armenian Americans,"
    he said. "Foxman ought to issue a public retraction and an apology
    to the Armenian community, and also to the Jewish community. Barring
    that, he should be fired."

    In an apparent attempt to short-circuit the controversy playing
    out in Watertown, ADL's Boston office seemed to backtrack from the
    organization's line.

    "ADL has never denied what happened at the close of the First World
    War," the Boston officer asserted in a letter to be published later
    this week in the Boston Globe. "There were massacres of Armenians
    and great suffering at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. We believe
    today's Turkish government should do more than it has done to come
    to grips with the past and reconcile with Armenians."

    The "No Place for Hate" committee and the ADL are currently working to
    set up a meeting. It appears unlikely that sentiments conveyed in the
    letter to the Boston Globe will be enough to assuage the anger that
    Armenians feel over what they see as a blatant denial of their history.

    "We probably would have to sever our ties if the ADL does not get
    into a conversation with us and work this issue out," Thomasian said.

    "This is a wonderful opportunity to have a public understanding of
    the whole nine yards of this denial, why perfectly reasonable people
    fall into traps like this."
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