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  • ADL Still in Hot Water

    ADL Still in Hot Water

    Wed. Sep 12, 2007
    The Jewish Daily
    FORWARD


    Though it acknowledged last month that World War I-era massacres of
    Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks were "tantamount to genocide,"
    the Anti-Defamation League, which long steered clear of using the word
    genocide in connection with the Armenians, continues to draw fire from
    a number of quarters for not endorsing a congressional resolution
    recognizing atrocities committed against the Armenians.

    "It's progress," said Elizabeth Chouldjian, communications director of
    the Armenian National Committee of America, of the ADL's August
    reversal, "but more needs to be done - and that certainly includes
    congressional reaffirmation of this crime against humanity."

    The ADL changed course last month after the town council of the Boston
    suburb of Watertown voted to sever ties with an anti-bigotry program
    sponsored by the ADL. In the weeks since the ADL's reversal, still
    more Massachusetts towns have voted to reassess their ties to the ADL.

    Voices from Massachusetts were echoed this week by a representative of
    Armenia's Jewish community. In a letter reportedly sent to the ADL's
    national director, Abraham Foxman, a leader of the few hundred person
    community lamented the ADL's refusal to endorse the congressional
    resolution.

    The ADL has also continued to draw barbs from writers at the blog
    Jewcy.com, which last Thursday night staged a protest outside the 92nd
    Street Y in New York while Foxman sat onstage inside discussing
    antisemitism with Clinton adviser Stuart Eizenstat.

    The future of the Armenian Genocide bill now before Congress is
    uncertain. The resolution has 225 co-sponsors, enough to ensure
    passage, said Chouldjian, but its fate is ultimately in the hands of
    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    The ADL and a number of other mainstream Jewish groups, including the
    American Jewish Committee, have declined to endorse the legislation,
    largely due to a fear of offending Turkey.

    At the same time, a wide and unlikely coalition of Jewish
    organizations has signed on in support of the congressional bill,
    including the dovish Americans for Peace Now and the hawkish Zionist
    Organization of America.

    - Gabriel Sanders

    Source: http://www.forward.com/articles/gelt-complex-funds -end-strange-trip-adl-still-in-00467/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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