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Armenian group urges No Place For Hate action

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  • Armenian group urges No Place For Hate action

    Armenian group urges No Place For Hate action

    By Patrick Ball
    Bedford Minuteman
    Thu Sep 06, 2007, 11:34 AM EDT

    Bedford, Mass. -

    By Patrick Ball
    Staff Writer

    The present state of Anti-Defamation League affairs, regarding the
    organization's national stance on the Armenian genocide, has some
    residents pushing for Bedford to revoke its ADL-sponsored No Place For
    Hate designation to become no place for denial.

    A group of area Armenian-American advocates at-large Tuesday urged the
    Violence Prevention Coalition, which also serves at the No Place For
    Hate advisory committee, to server ties with the Anti-Defamation
    League until the organization unambiguously acknowledges the massacre
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during WWI was a genocide and supports
    Congressional affirmation of the genocide as such.

    The committee No Place For Hate "should not wait for the ADL" to
    reevaluate their stance at their Nov. 1 meeting, because "waiting is
    showing tolerance toward hate," said Berge Jololian, a Cambridge
    resident who's followed this issue since July.

    The Violence Prevention Coalition is a local advisory committee and No
    Place For Hate is one of the programs it advises on. Therefore, it is
    not within the committee's purview to withdraw from No Place For Hate,
    said Committee Chairwoman Sue Baldauf. Any decisions regarding No
    Place For Hate would have to be made by the selectmen and Town
    Manager.

    Baldauf, who is also the director of Bedford Youth and Family
    Services, informed the advocates she has been talking with the ADL
    about the issue, and that she would "love to have a local program to
    educate the community about the Armenian genocide."

    After discussion the Armenian appeal, the VPC voted to recommend
    selectmen to reconsider Bedford's status as a No Place For Hate
    community because of the ADL's ambiguous stance on the Armenian
    genocide.

    "This is an emotional issue, and there is no precedent for a local
    group like this to take a stand on an international issue that I know
    of," Baldauf said.

    The No Place For Hate program's stance relative to the ADL puts it in
    a precarious position, said Baldauf, emphasizing that the committee's
    decision is "not a statement against the No Place For Hate program at
    all."

    A group of Bedford residents first came together after finding out the
    Armenian genocide issue would be discussed and "got the ball rolling
    based on the events in surrounding communities," said Stephen
    Dulgarian, of Bedford.

    The group is circulating a petition requesting that the No Place For
    Hate leadership "issues a public statement opposing Turkey's
    state-sponsored campaign to deny the Armenian Genocide and call on its
    sponsor, the Anti-Defamation League, through its National Director Mr.
    Foxman, to openly and unequivocally acknowledge the Armenian Genocide
    and support congressional affirmation of this crime against humanity."

    Dulgarian said he is "pretty sure" the group plans to get on the
    selectmen's Aug. 17 agenda.

    >From 1915 to 1923, Ottoman Turks massacred as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians. The Turkish government rebuffs the genocide label
    Armenians, historians, and some European nations use to characterize
    the killings.

    This issue was brought to light by a July 6 letter in the Watertown
    Tab. Just over a month later, the Watertown Town Council decided to
    pull out of the No Place For Hate program in protest of the ADL's
    refusal to recognize the massacre as genocide.

    Abraham Foxman, the ADL's national director, has flip-flopped on the
    issue in recent months. First, he refused to recognize the massacre as
    genocide and fired Andrew Tarsy, ADL's New England regional director,
    for publicly opposing the organization's national stance. Then, less
    than two weeks later, he acknowledged the Armenian Genocide and
    rehired Tarsy. Still, Foxman adamantly opposes a Congressional
    resolution. In an Aug. 21 press release, he said such a resolution
    would be a "counterproductive diversion" that could put both the
    "Turkish Jewish community and the important multilateral relationship
    between Turkey, Israel and the United States" at risk.

    Source: http://www.townonline.com/bedford/homepage/x942962 286
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