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  • No place for ADL in Newton

    No place for ADL in Newton

    By Chrissie Long
    GateHouse News Service
    New! Tue Sep 18, 2007, 05:58 PM EDT

    Newton -

    Mayor David Cohen has ended an eight-year relationship with the
    Anti-Defamation League's No Place for Hate program.

    In keeping with the recommendation of the city's Human Rights
    Commission, Cohen said in a statement released Tuesday that the
    national ADL should change its policy and fully recognize the Armenian
    Genocide, before Newton can rejoin the tolerance-promoting campaign.

    Newton becomes the third community - after Watertown and Belmont - to
    withdraw from No Place for Hate.

    "For me, this is a matter of conscience," Cohen said in a phone
    interview. "People of conscience need to stand up and acknowledge the
    historic fact of genocide. My hope is that national ADL will follow
    the regional ADL and change its policy on the Armenian Genocide."

    Choosing their words carefully, members of the Human Rights Commission
    decided Sept. 12 that the best response to the Anti-Defamation
    League's position was to "cease participation" with No Place for Hate
    until the national ADL fully and unequivocally recognizes the Armenian
    Genocide and actively support congressional legislation which would do
    the same.

    During that emotionally charged meeting in the cafeteria of City Hall,
    members of the Armenian-American community pleaded with commissioners
    to follow the lead of Watertown and sever ties with ADL.

    "We have been waiting for the recognition of our history all our
    lives," said Cambridge resident Alik Arzoumanian, with tears forming
    in her eyes. "[After 92 years of waiting,] I don't want to give ADL
    and No Place for Hate one more day ... I am hurt and I am offended. We
    have to [send] this symbolic message in severing ties."

    Newton resident David Boyajian, who exposed the ADL's controversial
    position in a letter to the Watertown TAB & Press in July, said that
    withdrawing from No Place for Hate is the best way to influence the
    national ADL.

    "[Newton's decision] is a great loss for National ADL," Boyajian said
    Tuesday. "I think it will push them in the right direction. [Mayor
    David Cohen's statement] is a step forward for genocide awareness and
    prevention."

    Only four Newton residents spoke in favor of remaining a member of No
    Place for Hate - all four are representatives of ADL. They asked
    commissioners to wait for them to discuss the issue with the national
    ADL at their annual meeting Nov. 1.

    Gerry Tishler, who co-founded No Place for Hate with the late ADL New
    England leader and Newton resident Lenny Zakim, agreed that the
    Armenian Genocide should be recognized for what it is, but he didn't
    want Newton to leave No Place for Hate.

    "If you drop No Place for Hate, or even if you make it conditional
    upon the outcome of this vote in November, you are throwing the baby
    out with the bathwater. You are making a bad mistake," said the
    35-year Newton resident. "We have added so much to your communities to
    assist you in combating hatred. Don't reject us now."

    Newton resident Lori Ganz, who also serves as an ADL commissioner,
    said that the city could best help the national organization change
    >From within, if it remained a member.

    "Change happens by those who show up," she said. "Those who walk away
    don't have influence. We ask you to be our partners. Don't leave us
    alone to fight this [battle.]"

    Members of the Human Rights Commission stressed that Newton will
    remain an anti-hate community, even though they will not operate under
    an organization that rejected one of the greatest hate crimes in
    history.

    "You must stand up for everyone," said Sona Petrossian, human rights
    commissioner. "When you stand up to injustice, you can't pick the
    people you stand up for. We sit under the umbrella for No Place for
    Hate: Do we as commissioners and advisory board members feel
    comfortable staying under that umbrella when it has been tarnished
    with this issue?"

    The Anti-Defamation League, founded in 1913 to secure justice and fair
    treatment to all citizens, has yet to unequivocally recognize the
    Armenian Genocide and to support congressional legislation conceding
    that the mass killings was a genocide.

    Instead, National Director Abraham Foxman has called the massacres
    only "tantamount to genocide" and continued to oppose congressional
    legislation acknowledging it.

    In a column published in the Jerusalem Post last week, Foxman wrote
    that he "understood the passion behind [the appeals to recognize the
    genocide], but I was frustrated and disheartened that these critics
    were not taking seriously the dilemma we faced."

    "For us, there were competing moral principles at work," he wrote.
    "The security and well-being of Jews everywhere in the world is a
    priority for ADL. In this case, it was listening to the views of the
    leaders of the Turkish Jewish community, a community that lives well
    in Turkey but is still a small community of 20,000 in a country of 65
    million Muslims. A guiding principle for ADL is that when Jewish
    communities around the world appeal to us on matters that may have an
    impact on their lives, we don't act as if we know better. We pay
    attention."

    But this week's efforts in Newton and Belmont - with both Wellesley
    and Needham considering similar moves - may force Foxman's further
    attention here as well.

    "We have a moral obligation to witness and to record injustice," said
    Newton South teacher Viviana Planine. "Politics should not enter into
    it. This is a human rights issue; politics should stay out of it."

    Chrissie Long can be reached at [email protected].

    Source: http://www.townonline.com/newton/homepage/x4283621 60
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