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Belmont Withdraws From ADL Program

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  • Belmont Withdraws From ADL Program

    BELMONT WITHDRAWS FROM ADL PROGRAM
    By Alex I. Oster, Globe Correspondent

    Boston Globe
    September 18, 2007
    United States

    BELMONT - The Board of Selectmen voted unanimously yesterday to end
    the town's membership in the No Place for Hate program, sponsored by
    the Anti-Defamation League.

    Selectmen voted 2 to 1 against a clause in the resolution that
    would make membership in the program conditional on the ADL's clear
    acknowledgment that the massacres of Armenian Turks were genocide and
    upon its support of congressional legislation that would officially
    acknowledge the genocide.

    Dissenting members said it was not their place to influence national
    politics. But Selectman Paul Solomon, who supported the second clause,
    said Armenians "have lived in the shadow of this horrendous event,
    and continual denial is a personal affront to them all."

    Many Armenian groups view the ADL's lack of support for the
    congressional legislation as hypocritical, considering it is a civil
    rights organization.

    Watertown, Arlington, and Newton have also ended their involvement with
    the program, while Needham's Human Rights Commission is waiting to take
    action, pending ADL response to the commission's concerns. Bedford's
    Board of Selectmen decided yesterday to wait until November to decide
    on membership. More than 50 towns and cities in Massachusetts remain
    members of No Place for Hate.

    Debate among the three male members of Belmont's Board of Selectmen
    did not run smoothly last night. After a selectman raised objections
    to the second clause of the resolution, David Boyajian of Newton -
    credited by many with starting the exodus with a letter published in
    the Watertown TAB & Press - accused the selectmen "of being prejudiced
    against Armenians and treating them as second-class citizens."

    Board of Selectmen chairman Angelo R. Firenze tabled the matter after
    the crowd became unruly, but a calming speech by a local resident
    caused selectmen to revive the measure.
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