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Abe Foxman Criticizes Local Approach On Armenian Issue

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  • Abe Foxman Criticizes Local Approach On Armenian Issue

    ABE FOXMAN CRITICIZES LOCAL APPROACH ON ARMENIAN ISSUE
    By Raphael Kohan

    Jewish Advocate , MA
    Nov 1 2007

    ADL national director calls out Boston's Jewish community leaders

    In an interview published on Oct. 26 by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency,
    Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League,
    criticized Boston's Jewish leadership for its handling of this summer's
    controversy surrounding recognition of the Armenian genocide. Foxman
    accused the local community of not giving proper priority to Israeli
    interests, singling out Combined Jewish Philanthropies President
    Barry Shrage and Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston
    Executive Director Nancy K. Kaufman.

    In the interview, which was conducted last month, Foxman told the
    interviewer that he was "shocked, upset, frightened" that the Boston
    Jewish community had rallied so strongly against him, deciding to
    side with the local Armenian community rather than with the ADL.

    "I got made fun of for it," Foxman said of the ADL's initial stance
    on the Armenian genocide. "[I] said we need unity now because Iran
    is a threat, Hamas is a threat, Hezbollah is a threat, anti-Semitism
    in Europe and Latin America. The last thing we need now is for Barry
    Shrage and Nancy Kaufman to be fighting us."

    Kaufman was the driving force on a petition signed by local groups
    that urged Foxman to recognize the Armenian massacres as genocide.

    "We have nothing to apologize for," said Alan Ronkin, deputy director
    of the JCRC. "We have never personally attacked Foxman. The fact that
    he personally attacked us is outrageous."

    Regional Director Andrew H. Tarsy was not available for comment.

    Yet Foxman defended his organization's original position, saying
    that he only yielded to Boston-area Jews like Tarsy and Kaufman to
    preserve unity. Foxman maintained that while he has had Israel's and
    Jewish interests in mind for the long-term, Boston leaders chose to
    champion current local relations, putting the Armenian issue ahead
    of the interests of the State of Israel.

    "It was very clear that there are two moral issues, but one trumps
    the other. And it was clear to me that I cannot save one Armenian
    human being, not one," said Foxman. "We need a strong unified Jewish
    community to help Israel ... I gave for the greater purpose so that
    we can now sit and talk together. It almost destroyed our operation
    in Boston."

    And what the Boston community revealed about itself during the summer
    controversy was disturbing, according to Foxman.

    "What I didn't realize was to what extent the American Jewish community
    has reversed Hillel, or at least in Boston and Massachusetts," Foxman
    said, referring to Hillel's famous adage, "If I am not for myself,
    who will be for me?"

    Foxman attributed the Boston Jewish community's diminished sense
    of self-preservation to the high instance of intermarriage and
    assimilation in the Boston area. According to Combined Jewish
    Philanthropy's 2005 Community Study, 29 percent of all Jewish
    households in Greater Boston are intermarried.

    Locally, CJP has made outreach to interfaith families a priority
    in maintaining a strong Jewish community, working closely with
    organizations like InterfaithFamily.com.

    "I am very proud of our community," said Shrage. "I understand Abe's
    concerns, but he is wrong about the Boston Jewish community. I think
    he knows he is. We are allowed to disagree in our community, but he was
    wrong to characterize the Boston Jewish community in the way he did."

    Foxman and others predicted fallout in U.S. and Israel's relationship
    with Turkey if a congressional resolution recognizing the genocide
    were passed. And those fears seemed to be realized when Turkey recalled
    its ambassador to the U.S. in October.

    "This is simply a conflict between the more narrow or limited local
    idealistic interests which focused on local politics and acknowledging
    a past genocide, versus the broader and more pragmatic concerns of
    the national leadership which focused on support for preventing a
    future genocide," said Grand Rabbi Y. A. Korff.

    In perhaps his most biting criticism of the local community, Foxman
    asserted that area Jews no longer care about the fate of the Jewish
    state as much as they once did.

    "Israel is no longer as significant," Foxman said. "Some of this stuff
    I read and hear about in Boston was, 'Why do we have to sacrifice our
    relationship with our Armenian friends and neighbors for Israel?' I
    heard people say to me if the [Jews in Turkey] are in trouble, let
    them leave. That's what I miscalculated."

    But according to Kaufman, Foxman's information is misguided.

    "He got it all wrong," she said. "He does not understand the
    Boston Jewish community at all. We are absolutely, unequivocally,
    passionately, and universally supportive of Israel. The Boston Jewish
    community should be outraged by his comments."

    The national ADL office was not available for comment.

    When asked if Foxman's remarks - despite his assertion that unity is
    needed among Jews - would widen the divide between himself and the
    Boston Jewish community, Kaufman declined to comment.

    Kaufman added: "While Abe has been an incredible Jewish leader
    nationally, he does not know how to behave locally."

    See Weekly Poll

    Molly Ritvo and Rachel L. Axelbank contributed to this report.

    http://www.thejewishadvocate.com/this_wee ks_issue/news/?content_id=3928
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