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  • ADL's Decision Doesn't Go Far Enough

    ADL'S DECISION DOESN'T GO FAR ENOUGH
    By David N. Myers

    The Jewish Journal of greater L.A, CA
    http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/preview.php?i d=18125
    Aug 31 2007

    Last week's news that the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) had reversed
    course and decided to recognize the Turkish massacres of Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923 as a genocide is a necessary step forward for
    that organization.

    Unfortunately, it does not go far enough in rectifying the ADL's
    mystifying policy on this question. For while acknowledging that the
    massacres were a genocide, the ADL and its national director, Abraham
    Foxman, continue to refuse to support the congressional resolution
    (HR 106) that officially recognizes the Armenian genocide.

    This points to a logical inconsistency, as well as lingering obduracy,
    on the part of the ADL. There is also a certain disingenuous quality
    to the ADL's half-shift.

    For years Foxman has repeatedly stated, when asked why his organization
    holds to its stance, that the issue of whether there was a genocide of
    Armenians should not be decided by American Jewish communal leaders
    but rather left to historians. And yet, he has repeatedly ignored
    the opinion of an overwhelming majority of historians that the
    Turkish massacres were a genocide. Moreover, his decision last week
    to acknowledge the genocide was based less on any serious and sober
    consultative process (precisely what he should have engaged in years
    ago) than on a hurried decision to avoid intense public pressure and
    calls for his resignation.

    What precipitated this abrupt change of course was a spiraling set
    of developments in the Boston area several weeks ago. Controversy
    had been brewing for some time in Watertown, Mass., home to a large
    number of Armenians, over the ADL's sponsorship of its No Place for
    Hate program in that town.

    A groundswell of popular concern led the Watertown town council to
    sever its relationship with the No Place for Hate program in light
    of the ADL's refusal to recognize the Armenian genocide. Throughout
    this controversy the ADL's regional director, Andrew Tarsy, heeded
    the ADL line that Armenians did not suffer a "genocide," ~K until on
    Aug. 16 when he broke with the organization's declared position and
    decried it as "morally reprehensible."

    For this brave act of conscience Tarsy was summarily fired, prompting
    several members of the ADL's New England board to resign in protest.

    Shortly thereafter on Aug. 21, Foxman issued a statement asserting that
    "the consequences of those (i.e., Turkish) actions were tantamount to
    genocide." However, he continued by proclaiming that "a congressional
    resolution on such matters is a counterproductive diversion."

    But how, in light of the first statement, could acknowledgement of a
    genocidal atrocity be a "counterproductive diversion?" And why should
    Tarsy, whose courage and conviction set in motion the ADL's shift,
    be the victim of his own organization's bad judgment?

    These questions push to the surface a set of larger and troubling
    concerns about American Jewish organizational life.

    First, the ADL's clumsy and insensitive handling of the Armenian
    question exposes the way in which shortsighted political goals can
    easily cloud the moral judgment of the organized Jewish community.

    Foxman and others who resist HR 106 fear that the resolution will
    antagonize the Turkish government and prompt it to rethink its military
    alliance with Israel and the United States.

    Yes, Turkey is Israel's best friend in the Muslim world. But apart
    from the improbability of that country severing its relations with
    either Israel or the United States, we must ask whether supporting
    those who falsify and distort the historical record is ever in our
    or their interests.

    Moreover, do not Jews, of all people, have a special responsibility to
    raise their voices at the sight or prospect of genocide? The answer,
    as groups such as Jewish World Watch make patently clear, is that we
    can never abdicate our responsibility to act against ethnic cleansing
    or genocide, whether committed by friend or foe.

    Second, this episode reminds us of how detached and undemocratic our
    Jewish communal leadership is. No referendum has ever been held in
    the Jewish community on the question of the Armenian genocide or,
    for that matter, on any other major issue of substance. And yet,
    Foxman and his counterparts at other national Jewish organizations
    routinely adopt policies and speak on behalf of the community based
    on their own sense of what is best for the Jews.

    Often, and surely in this case, their judgment rests on what they deem
    to be in the best interests of the State of Israel. But who appointed
    or elected them to speak in our name ~K either on the question of
    what's in Israel's best interests or of whether to recognize the
    Armenian genocide? The time has come to scrutinize anew the power
    that these communal leaders arrogate to themselves.

    Finally, this episode raises serious doubts about the leadership
    of Foxman at the helm of one of the country's most venerable Jewish
    organizations.

    There can be no question that Foxman has fought tirelessly against
    anti-Semitism over the course of his career. For that he is to be
    commended. But he has also grown imperious and detached, playing the
    role of defender-in-chief of the Jews with a somewhat dictatorial air.

    He has brusquely pushed out colleagues in the ADL, such as Tarsy in
    Boston and David Lehrer in Los Angeles, talented and devoted community
    leaders who dared to speak their mind. He has created an organization
    in his own image, one that breeds obeisance rather than independence.

    As the Armenian genocide debate makes so clear, what is needed from
    our Jewish communal leaders is a different set of qualities than those
    evinced by Foxman ~K open-mindedness, nuance, historical knowledge
    and fealty to core Jewish values. Enough is enough. We deserve better.

    Foxman should follow the logic of his own statement and take the
    essential next step of supporting HR 106. Further, he should admit
    the error of his abrupt action and restore Tarsy to his position.

    In parallel, our local Anti-Defamation League board should either
    announce its support for HR 106 --if not here in the heart of the
    Armenian diaspora, then where? -- or renounce the organization's
    declared mission "to secure justice and fair treatment to all."

    David N. Myers teaches Jewish history at UCLA.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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