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ANCEM: Armenians And Jewish Leaders Unite To Protest Genocide Denial

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  • ANCEM: Armenians And Jewish Leaders Unite To Protest Genocide Denial

    PRESS RELEASE
    Date: September 4, 2007
    Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts
    47 Nichols Avenue, Watertown MA 02472
    Contact: Sevag Arzoumanian
    Tel: 617-233-3174
    Email: [email protected]

    ARMENIANS AND JEWISH LEADERS UNITE TO PROTEST GENOCIDE DENIAL
    -- Campaign begun in Watertown, Massachusetts spreads throughout
    the Bay State

    WATERTOWN, MA - Massachusetts State Representative Rachel
    Kaprielian (Watertown) and Boston City Councilor Michael P. Ross
    (District 8) hosted a demonstration at the State House on August
    30th of the growing solidarity between the Jewish and Armenian
    American communities in working against the denial of the Armenian
    Genocide, reported the Armenian National Committee of Eastern
    Massachusetts (ANCEM.)

    The event featured remarks by Kaprielian and Ross, as well as State
    Representative Peter Koutoujian (Waltham); Rabbi Ronne Friedman of
    Temple Israel Boston; Rev. Gregory V. Haroutunian of the First
    Armenian Church of Belmont; Holocaust survivor Israel Arbeiter, who
    serves as President of the American Association of Jewish Holocaust
    Survivors of Greater Boston; Armenian Genocide survivor Asdghig
    Alemian, 97, of Weymouth, and; Nancy Kaufman, Executive Director of
    the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston.

    Among the broad range of Jewish and Armenian community leaders
    present for the program were David Cohen, Mayor of the city of
    Newton, and Mark Sideris, Vice Chair of the Watertown Town Council,
    both of whom led efforts last month in their respective towns to
    condemn Armenian Genocide denial by the ADL and called on the ADL
    to support Congressional affirmation of this crime against humanity
    by publicly backing HR106.

    Kaprielian prefaced her opening remarks by emphasizing that, "We
    are all here to say that we need to stop what is going on in
    Darfur." Councilor Ross began by staging, "I'm a City Councilor in
    Boston and I'm a son of a Holocaust survivor." "It makes sense that
    we came together as community," stated Ross. "Not just because
    we're both small and active communities of Jews and Armenians, but
    also because we're people. We respect our cultures and support each
    other, when we need to and when we don't need to. We need to
    support each other and back each other up."

    Rabbi Friedman offered moving remarks placing the Armenian Genocide
    and Jewish Holocaust in the context of historical memory and
    present-day politics, quoting noted writer Maya Angelou, "History,
    despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with
    courage, need not be lived again."

    Rev. Haroutunian thanked the Jewish community for its strength and
    leadership in the No Place for Hate controversy, which precipitated
    the Anti-Defamation's League's (ADL) controversial firing, and
    subsequent re-hiring of Andrew Tarsy, the ADL's New England
    regional director. Tarsy was dismissed after speaking against the
    ADL's denial of the Armenian Genocide and its opposition to the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution, and later rehired after the ADL
    issued a "Statement on the Armenian Genocide" which backed way from
    this denial by saying that the "consequences" of Ottoman Turkey's
    efforts against the Armenians were "tantamount to genocide." "It
    has brought great light to the heart of God," Haroutunian said. "We
    commend Andrew Tarsy for his actions. So many people in the Jewish
    community demanded truth, not spin. After all, to deny the truth,
    even in innuendo, is dangerous. I commend the Jewish American
    community in Boston. You stood for something, simply because it is
    right. We thank God for your community and we really do pray that
    others will follow your example."

    Holocaust survivor Israel Arbeiter spoke of his experience of
    genocide, recalling, "I was a slave. I spent five years in a
    concentration camp." He praised those present for their attendance,
    "Let's hope from this small gathering that more will blossom. Let's
    join hands and work together so that it will never ever happen
    again."

    Armenian Genocide survivor Asdghig Alemian remembered her own
    experience, noting that, "I was five years old at the time the
    Turks took me. My mother starved to death on the [death] march.
    They called it Der Zor. They were told to take three days of food
    and that they would be taken back home. It never happened."

    "We must see acknowledgement by our government while there are
    still Armenian Genocide survivors still alive," Kaprielian said.
    Nancy Kaufman added that it
    is the moral responsibility of Massachusetts citizens to ensure
    that the state divests from Sudan and ensures that taxes do not
    finance the ongoing genocide in Darfur. She said of the Armenian
    Genocide and its legacy, "The Genocide represents the failure of
    the international community to prevent the worst crime in the world
    - the destruction of an entire people." Ross concluded the program,
    saying to the Armenians present, "In the Jewish community, we say
    you are all mishpucha [family]."

    The State House demonstration was held in response to growing
    public activism in response to the Watertown, Massachusetts - Anti
    Defamation League controversy which erupted in recent months after
    Boston area civil rights advocates, and local Armenian and Jewish
    American community members expressed disappointment and outrage at
    statements by ADL National Director Abe Foxman denying the Armenian
    Genocide. The
    Watertown Town Council set this process in motion last month by
    highlighting the improper stance of the ADL and urging national
    leaders to take up this issue.

    In recent weeks, the ADL, under pressure from a campaign of
    protests led by the ANC-EM, backed nationally by the Armenian
    National Committee of America, and supported by leading voices in
    the Jewish American community, backed away from its longstanding
    policy of complicity in Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide.
    The ADL continues to raise concerns among both Jewish and Armenian
    leaders as the result of its continued use of euphemistic phrasing
    and, most notably, its outright opposition to Congressional
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Foxman, in a move that has
    caused widespread outrage, apologized to the Turkish government for
    any difficulty his organization's statement on the Armenian
    Genocide has created for the Turkish government, but has yet to
    offer even a token expression of regret to the Armenian people for
    his group's longstanding and public record of denying the horrific
    crime committed against them.

    "We appreciate the leadership of Representative Kaprielian and
    Councilor Ross," stated ANCEM spokesperson Joshua Tevekelian. "It
    is through their commitment and the commitment of so many
    individuals and organizations throughout our great state and
    country, including the entire Massachusetts Congressional
    delegation and an amazing number of Armenian and Jewish individuals
    and organizations in calling for passage of the Congressional
    Armenian Genocide Resolution, H.Res.106, that we will collectively
    take an important step toward ending genocide denial and genocide
    once and for all."

    "Throughout this entire process, we have been heartened and
    encouraged by the outpouring of support ` from Jewish American
    individuals and organizations throughout New England - against all
    forms of denial of the Armenian Genocide ` including,
    unfortunately, the opposition to the Armenian Genocide Resolution
    by the Anti-Defamation League," added Tevekelian.
    ####
    Photos available upon request
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