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JERUSALEM: Boston Armenians: ADL guilty of genocide denial

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  • JERUSALEM: Boston Armenians: ADL guilty of genocide denial

    Jerusalem post
    Sept 1 2007


    Boston Armenians: ADL guilty of genocide denial

    By MATT RAND JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT
    Boston

    Members of the Armenian community here still say the Anti-Defamation
    League is complicit in "genocide denial," despite the ADL's recent
    acknowledgment that the murder of Armenians was "tantamount to
    genocide."


    The Armenian Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, Torkom Manoogian, lays
    a wreath in the city, marking the anniversary of the mass killing of
    Armenians in Turkey.
    Photo: AP [file]


    The Boston-area Armenians also said the world's failure to stop the
    murder of Armenians during WWI had made the Holocaust possible.


    They are pressing the ADL to lobby on their behalf for official
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the US government.

    "If the world had done something when the [Armenian] Genocide
    happened, they would have prevented the Holocaust," said Sarkis
    Antreassian, as he sat with the owner of the Arax grocery store in
    Boston's Watertown suburb as the latter helped an Israeli in the
    checkout line. Watertown is home to a large Armenian community.

    "Hitler said, when he was killing the Jews: 'Who remembered the
    Armenians? Nobody remembered the Armenians, so nobody will care about
    the Jews.' So he kept killing them," Antreassian reasoned.

    The ADL had "upset a lot of Armenians," he said, added that the US
    was hesitant to openly acknowledge the genocide because of the
    American military bases on "the occupied Armenian land" and the
    conflict it would create with millions of Kurds [in eastern Turkey]
    who where living "on the Armenian land too."

    But he was optimistic that things would work out in the end.

    "Sooner or later it [the Armenian Genocide] will be accepted," said
    Antreassian. "I don't know if I'm going to see that, but it will be
    accepted. You can't keep denying. It's getting worse and worse every
    year. When the whole world accepts it, the United States has to
    accept it. Maybe not too soon, but it will happen."

    Other Armenians also said it was a moral imperative for the ADL to
    officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    "Have we [the Armenians] ever denied the reality of the Holocaust?
    Never. We would never dream of doing so," Tatul Sonentz Papazian, the
    executive director of the Armenian Relief Society, said outside
    Watertown's Armenian Cultural Association building.

    He was surprised the ADL had not officially recognized the genocide,
    he said, since it was an organization whose "basis is on morality.
    You know - defending those who can not defend themselves against
    people who attack them... They pretend to be something that they are
    not. They've become a highly politicized agency of Israel."

    "They should tell it like it is," Sonentz Papazian added.

    The ADL preached "tolerance, but practiced divisiveness and denial,"
    said Armenian National Committee representative Grace Kehetian
    Kulegian. She suggested the ADL echoed the "rhetoric of the Turkish
    government," and said she hoped the Jewish organization would end its
    "truly unfortunate affiliation with genocide denial."

    "We cannot join with the ADL when they refuse to recognize the
    genocide," added Watertown Councilor-at-Large Marilyn Petitto
    Devaney.

    The suburb's large Armenian community is backing a proclamation
    sponsored by Petitto Devaney to suspend cooperation with the ADL in
    an anti-bigotry program.

    "The ADL has no part in this [the "No Place for Hate" program], and
    we should not allow partnership with them," said Petitto Devaney, who
    sits on the Governor's Council that oversees state judges'
    nominations.

    The councilwoman said she was motivated by a friend of hers whose
    grandmother only revealed that she had been raped during the Armenian
    Genocide, at the age of 12, about five years before she died.

    Another friend, Petitto Devaney said, told her that "his mother never
    talked about her surviving and losing all her family in the genocide.
    But on her death bed, she said in Armenian: 'They're coming for us
    now.'

    "So for them, and all who died... [and for the] survivors, I offer
    this proclamation."

    According to the proclamation, the ADL denied the "facts of the
    horrific Armenian Genocide" and "deprived the Armenian people of a
    right to their history."

    Saying that they had never "negated" the "painful events of 1915-1918
    perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as massacres
    and atrocities," the Anti-Defamation League denied claims it had
    shown any disrespect for Armenian history. At the same time, the ADL
    said that lobbying on behalf of the Armenians would not improve
    Turkish-Armenian relations.
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