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'No Place For Hate' No Longer

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  • 'No Place For Hate' No Longer

    'NO PLACE FOR HATE' NO LONGER
    By James Vaznis, Globe Staff

    Boston Globe, MA
    Oct 21 2007

    Town cuts ADL ties over genocide

    No longer do signs welcome travelers to Westwood as a "No Place for
    Hate" community. Those signs, located at four town lines, were taken
    down last week.

    Selectmen decided Monday night to suspend participation in the
    antidiscrimination program because they don't believe its sponsor, the
    Anti-Defamation League, has gone far enough in recognizing the Armenian
    genocide of nearly a century ago - an issue that remains a sensitive
    matter today, especially for area residents of Armenian heritage.

    Westwood joins Arlington, Belmont, Lexington, Newton, and Watertown
    in suspending or cutting ties with the ADL, believing its refusal
    to directly acknowledge the historical genocide runs counter to the
    ADL's mission of fighting against hatred and fostering an atmosphere
    of mutual respect. About 60 cities and towns across the state,
    including many south of Boston, belong to the ADL's local No Place
    for Hate program.

    "I think the community wished it didn't have to come to this," said
    Town Administrator Michael Jaillet. "We wish our sponsor had taken
    a different position and stood up for the truth."

    The ADL acknowledged in August that the Ottoman Empire's massacres of
    Armenians from 1915 to 1923 was "tantamount to genocide." But Westwood
    and other critics want the ADL to use sharper language - dropping the
    "tantamount to" - and push for congressional passage of a resolution
    directly acknowledging the genocide.

    Westwood, where some Armenian residents pushed for dropping the ADL
    affiliation, will continue promoting cultural harmony, town leaders
    say. But the No Place for Hate Committee will now go by a new name,
    the Human Rights Committee.

    "The town of Westwood has concluded that our ability to carry out the
    founding principals of the No Place for Hate program is seriously
    compromised by the ADL's position on the Armenian genocide and the
    House and Senate resolution," said Nancy Hyde, chairwoman of the
    Board of Selectmen, reading from a letter the town sent to the ADL
    last week about their vote.

    Al Gordon, a spokesman for the New England region of the ADL, said
    the town will find it difficult going it alone in its campaign for
    tolerance.

    "We think in the long run Westwood will not profit from its decision
    to sever ties," Gordon said. "The ADL has internationally recognized
    expertise in dealing with hate incidents and promoting cultural
    awareness."

    Since adopting the No Place for Hate program two years ago, the
    committee has done such things as passing out literature on tolerance,
    organizing panel discussions, and participating in local cultural
    events. The ADL helped the group locate speakers and a choir of
    Ugandan orphans for a Martin Luther King Day program this year.

    Tom Viti, the town's library director who cochairs the Human
    Rights Committee, acknowledged it would be difficult to replace the
    connections the ADL has.

    "The ADL has been really involved in high-pressure volatile situations
    in responding to hate crimes," he said. "The committee is going to
    have to do a bit more work."

    But he said the town's new Human Rights Committee will probably
    seek out guidance from other similar groups, and hopes to offer an
    increased number of programs and events each year.

    The ADL first came under fire this summer in Watertown. At that time,
    the ADL did not acknowledge the Armenian genocide, outraging the large
    Armenian population in that town. Watertown's decision to cut ties
    prompted other communities to follow and for the ADL's New England
    office to break from the national group's position of not calling
    the massacres a genocide.

    Ultimately, the ADL's national director, Abraham H. Foxman,
    in a carefully worded statement, acknowledged the massacres was
    "tantamount to genocide." The group, however, did not offer to support
    a resolution in Congress that would officially call the massacres
    a genocide. Support for that legislation, which had been building
    momentum, appeared to be eroding last week as the Bush administration
    worried it might offend the Turkish government, an ally of US military
    troops in Iraq.

    Westwood officials say they would restore the town's affiliation with
    the ADL if the group adopts sharper language and backs a Congressional
    resolution acknowledging the genocide.

    "We are looking for an unequivical statement," Viti said. "A word
    like tantamount starts to qualify things."
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