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  • Massacre or genocide? ADL controversy renews war over words

    North Shore Sunday, MA
    Sept 8 2007


    Massacre or genocide? ADL controversy renews war over words


    By Barbara Taormina/North Shore Sunday
    GateHouse News Service
    Sat Sep 08, 2007, 12:28 PM EDT


    NORTH SHORE -
    Last May, when Andrew Tarsy gave the commencement speech at
    Governor's Academy in Byfield, he offered up some of that
    inspirational advice you hear a lot at high school graduations.

    Tarsy, the director of the New England chapter of the Anti-Defamation
    League, gave the graduates several suggestions, including the
    well-worn tip that it's always best to follow your principles. He did
    mention that it's tough to be true to your beliefs, but it was a
    graduation ceremony and odds are no predictions about possible
    adversity were enough to dampen a day generally filled with parties,
    congratulations and great gifts.

    But if the graduates of Governor's Academy were keeping up with the
    news over the summer, they saw Tarsy live up to his own advice. On
    Aug. 17, Tarsy was fired after he broke ranks with the national ADL
    leadership and acknowledged that the systematic killing and
    deportation of a million and a half Armenians living in Turkey in
    1915 was, in fact, genocide.

    Despite the personal accounts of the death marches, the horrific
    photos of murder victims and refugees and the thousands of newspaper
    clips and documents that recount the tragic episode, the ADL has long
    been involved in a carefully nuanced dance on the issue. They have
    consistently called for reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia
    over what they have referred to as `the massacres.'

    But, because the league did not want to jeopardize the political
    alliances between Turkey, a moderate Muslim nation, and Israel, it
    backed away from the word `genocide.' And it did a complete duck and
    cover when it came to a Congressional resolution that would have the
    United States formally recognize the Armenian genocide.

    But last month, the ADL was forced to confront the issue when Tarsy
    told Abraham Foxman, the national director of the league, that the
    ADL's position was `morally indefensible.' Tarsy then went on to
    publicly acknowledge the Armenian genocide - a move that ended up
    costing him his job.

    The ADL leadership offered the excuse that it doesn't tolerate its
    employees making public statements that defy the League's position.
    But when the ADL came face to face with the hue and cry from Armenian
    groups, Jewish supporters and other human rights organizations who
    supported Tarsy, they blinked. By late last week, Tarsy was back at
    his desk issuing public statements and trying to heal fresh wounds.

    `I am proud that the ADL has made a very significant change
    confronting a moral issue and acknowledging the Armenian genocide for
    what it was,' says Tarsy. `The Anti-Defamation League has important
    work to do on such vital concerns as anti-Semitism, hate crimes,
    civil rights, immigration reform and interfaith relations, and I look
    forward to helping ADL make the world a better place.'

    Meanwhile, Foxman was issuing his own apologetic statements and
    trying to control the damage.

    `We have never negated but have always described the painful events
    of 1915-1918 perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians
    as massacres and atrocities,' says Foxman in one of several prepared
    statements. `On reflection, we have come to share the view of Henry
    Morgenthau, Sr. that the consequences of those actions were indeed
    tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they
    would have called it genocide.'

    The question now is whether the phrase `tantamount to genocide' is
    enough to quell the controversy. Many seem to feel it's not. And for
    Armenian Americans who have been waiting for 92 years for recognition
    of their history and for some public acknowledgement and support, the
    ADL flare-up may, in fact, be the breeze that finally blew open the
    door.

    A history of sidestepping

    Controversy surrounding the ADL position on the Armenian genocide
    isn't new. Beverly resident Judy Klein, a former editor of the
    Salem-based Jewish Journal, remembers several years ago when the ADL
    took out a full-page ad in the New York Times commending Turkey for
    75 years of democracy and for the country's record on upholding human
    rights. In the editorial from its April 13, 2001 edition, the Journal
    slammed both the ADL and Foxman for the ad.

    `... Turkey also did everything in its power to annihilate an entire
    people and, unlike Germany, has never offered an apology, expressed
    remorse, or even admitted wrongdoing,' reads the piece. `In fact,
    while ADL and other Jewish groups decry Holocaust deniers, Turkey
    continues to be unyielding in its denial of the Armenian Genocide.'

    The Journal went on to say the ADL's potion was hypocrisy, an
    `ethnocentric myopia,' that's bad for the image of Jews in the world
    and bad for Jewish kids who see their supposed role models using
    double standards for right and wrong.
    Even today, that ad still makes Klein, who is now the communications
    director of Governor's Academy, bristle.

    `We as Jews have an obligation to recognize other acts of inhumanity
    like the ones we have suffered,' she says.

    And Klein has a particular interest in promoting that solidarity
    between the Jewish and Armenian communities. She is married to John
    Soursourian, whose grandmother is a survivor of the Armenian
    genocide. Soursourian's grandfather was killed by the Turks - Klein
    says he was probably marked for death because he was a photographer
    capable of visually documenting what was happening in Turkey in 1915.

    Soursourian's grandmother survived a death march, and like other
    Armenians, escaped to Syria and eventually made her way to the United
    States.

    `Our kids are half Jewish and half Armenian and this is certainly
    something we feel strongly about as a family,' says Klein, who, like
    many, believes more needs to be done to tell the Armenian story. She
    has spoken with history teachers at several area high schools and
    insisted that when students study 20th century events and the
    Holocaust that they also discuss the Armenian genocide.

    `I'm still disappointed that history teachers don't know more about
    it,' she says. `I am hoping what Andy has done will force educators
    to recognize the importance of this. We are grateful to him.

    Armenian reaction

    Klein isn't the only local person who's grateful to Tarsy for taking
    a stand. Many Armenian organizations, newspapers and leaders have
    expressed thanks to Tarsy, including Peabody artist and filmmaker Apo
    Torosyan, who for years has been telling the story of the Armenian
    genocide through his painting and films.

    `I feel it's like when they dumped the tea in the harbor,' says
    Torosyan of the ADL controversy. `It was a tip of the iceberg that
    started a revolution. It's a miracle that scholars and the Jewish
    lobby have come to the rescue of the Armenians. I feel grateful for a
    gift like that.'

    Torosyan, who grew up in Turkey, graduated from Istanbul's Academy of
    Fine Art in 1968. That same year, he emigrated to the United States
    where he built a successful visual design company. In 1986, he sold
    the business so he could devote his time exclusively to his own art,
    which for decades now has been focused on the Armenian genocide.

    During the '70s Torosyan began working on a series of paintings and
    constructed collages that used bread as a central theme, a universal
    symbol of life. But as his `Bread Series' developed, so too did its
    political meaning. What began as a symbol or object of life for all
    people became more personal.

    `The bread, which is the staff of life, was taken away from my
    ancestors,' Torosyan writes. `It represents victims of oppression.
    They died in starvation, including my grandparents. I immortalize the
    bread within my concepts. It is an organic metaphor. It is the cycle
    of life.'

    The same type of progression can be seen in Torosyan's films. In
    2003, he produced `Discovering my Father's Village' which offers a
    personal account of the destruction that took place during the
    genocide. In a second film, `Witnesses,' Torosyan interviews two
    Armenian women who survived and lets them tell their stories.

    But in the new 40-minute film `Voices,' which premiered last April,
    Torosyan went even further. The film features interviews with four
    survivors of the political regime in Turkey during the early years of
    the 20th century.

    As children and young teens, they saw their homes being sacked and
    burned. They watched as people in their villages were rounded up and
    killed. And they had family members who were herded on death marches
    where many died of starvation.

    Torosyan has always stressed that he is an artist and not a
    politician and that the goal of his work is to open up an honest
    conversation about the past. But it's been difficult.

    For decades, the only time people seemed interested in the genocide
    is in late April when Armenian communities throughout the United
    States hold commemorative services to remember the one and half
    million victims who were killed. The ADL controversy, as ugly as it's
    been, has at least focused some attention on the past.

    `To see this recognition and exposure of the story which is
    unbelievable but true is tremendous,' says Torosyan.

    End of story?

    While both Armenians and Jews are pleased that Tarsy has been
    reinstated, and thankful that the truth is being acknowledged, they
    are not blindly optimistic about the next step - the Congressional
    resolution that officially recognizes the genocide.
    So far, 15 countries have acknowledged the suffering that took place
    in Turkey. France and Switzerland have gone one better and called for
    criminal charges against those who deny it was genocide.

    But the United States has refused to take that stand and the ADL,
    even with its conciliatory statements, continues to warn against such
    a move.

    `A Congressional resolution on such matters is a counterproductive
    diversion and will not foster reconciliation between Turks and
    Armenians and may put at risk the Turkish Jewish community and the
    important multilateral relationship between Turkey, Israel and the
    United States,' says Foxman in one of his statements.

    Although the ADL controversy may have given those pushing for a U.S.
    resolution some momentum, Torosyan remains skeptical. He's a realist
    and the odds of the U.S. taking the high road when political
    interests are at stake aren't good.

    Turkey's official position on the genocide is that it was essentially
    the government cracking down on a group of militant Armenian
    revolutionaries. They blame the widespread death and destruction -
    which in their version of events wasn't so widespread - on the chaos
    of World War I. That's their story and they're sticking to it.

    And because of Turkey's strategic location, its healthy economy, its
    appetite for military hardware and its political position as a Muslim
    ally of western democracies, Congress has, so far been unwilling to
    pass the resolution.

    `Money often wins and the U.S. isn't going to bend to a tiny country
    the size of Rhode Island,' says Torosyan. `But I do hope there will
    be some type of international law that will force recognition of the
    Armenian genocide.'

    But for now, Torosyan is thankful that people are at least talking
    about what happened 92 years ago.

    `We should share our history, even with all its pain,' he says.

    http://www.townonline.com/northshoresunday/ homepage/x1875626792
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