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Port Commission Takes Right Course In Challenging ADL

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  • Port Commission Takes Right Course In Challenging ADL

    PORT COMMISSION TAKES RIGHT COURSE IN CHALLENGING ADL

    The Daily News of Newburyport, MA
    http://www.newburyportnews.com/puopinion/local_st ory_243094032?keyword=topstory
    Aug 31 2007

    Consistency matters.

    That is the message the Newburyport Commission for Diversity and
    Tolerance is sending to the Anti-Defamation League regarding its
    continuing refusal to acknowledge that the slaughter of more than 1.5
    million Armenians by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1924 was genocide.

    The local commission is considering withdrawing from the ADL-sponsored
    No Place for Hate program unless the organization unambiguously
    acknowledges the Armenian genocide and lobbies Congress to do the
    same. Several other communities have already withdrawn, including
    Watertown earlier this month.

    This is a worthy and important message to send. The major reason for
    the ADL's existence is to recall the genocide against Jews committed by
    Nazi Germany and to make sure it never happens again. An organization
    like that should be at the forefront of acknowledging and condemning
    similar acts against any other ethnic groups.

    There have been some positive signs in response to the pressure. The
    director of the Boston ADL chapter, Andrew Tarsy, was recently
    reinstated after the national organization fired him for agreeing
    that the killing of the Armenians should be called a genocide.

    Abraham Foxman, the national ADL director, recently acknowledged it
    was "tantamount to genocide."

    But that, as Americans of Armenian descent and their supporters say,
    is deliberately ambiguous. They also want the ADL to stop opposing
    legislation in Congress that would formally recognize the genocide.

    This is not simply about putting a label on something, of course. The
    ADL is in a difficult position - caught between the pressure from
    Armenians and the fact that it does not want to jeopardize Israel's
    alliance with Turkey.

    But acknowledging and condemning horrific acts by a country nearly
    a century ago does not put blame on the present-day citizens of
    that country any more than modern-day Germans are to blame for the
    atrocities committed under Hitler.

    Acknowledging the sins of the past is one small way to prevent similar
    tragic chapters in the future. The ADL ought to vigorously support
    that. Those who are putting pressure on the organization to do so
    are doing a favor for the group and future generations of the world.
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