Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Selectmen hear Armenian issue

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Selectmen hear Armenian issue

    Selectmen hear Armenian issue

    Bedford Minuteman
    Wed Sep 19, 2007, 02:22 PM EDT

    Bedford, Mass. -

    By Patrick Ball
    Staff Writer

    Flanked by fellow Bedford residents of Armenian descent, Nancy
    Asbedian asked selectmen to help "lift the burden" borne by every
    Armenian-American in the room - a burden that will be passed on to
    their children.

    Between 1915 and 1918, 1 1/2 million Armenians were systematically
    slaughtered by the Ottoman Turks, she said. Much of the world has come
    to recognize this tragedy as genocide, but some, including the
    Anti-Defamation League, have not. This is the burden she spoke of.

    There is no statute of limitations on justice, and the democratic
    process starts with the people, she told selectmen Monday. "If the
    truth doesn't start in Bedford, then where?" she asked.

    The truth sought by the Armenian-American advocates is for the
    Anti-Defamation League to recognize unambiguously the Armenian
    Genocide and to support a congressional resolution on the issue. The
    ADL has said the massacre of 1 1/2 million Armenians by the Ottoman
    Turks during WWI was "tantamount to genocide," but adamantly opposes
    Congressional Resolution on the issue.

    No specific action was requested of the selectmen at the Monday
    meeting, but Asbedian, along with several other Armenian-Americans,
    implored selectmen to support a letter sent by the town's Violence
    Prevention Coalition to the New England regional branch of the ADL.

    Cathy Cordes, who is the selectmen's liaison to the VPC, said part of
    the VPC mission is to build inter-group understanding. "You being here
    is doing that," she told the Armenian-American advocates. "I hope that
    you keep telling your stories."

    The VPC letter, was penned after discussing the issue with the
    Armenian-American contingent at a Sept. 4 meeting, says the coalition
    will "watch very carefully what the ADL does [at a November meeting
    that will address the issue]." It was sent to the New England Regional
    Office last week, and Sue Baldauf, VPC chairwoman, said she was
    confident it would find its way to the national office.

    Baldauf, who is also director of Bedford Youth and Family Services,
    said the letter was intended to be supportive of the New England
    regional branch of the ADL, which took a position contrary to the
    national stance.

    "The VPC letter is a very strong [statement], the only thing I see
    missing is a deadline," said Stephen Dulgarian.

    The New England regional office of the ADL sent a letter to Bedford,
    which was received on Monday. The letter does not directly reference
    the VPC's letter, but does say, "We know that the Violence Prevention
    Coalition and other members of the community have some questions and
    concerns about the ADL and the Armenian Genocide issue."

    The letter says regarding the "fundamental moral issue," the ADL did
    acknowledge the genocide, but the "matter of the resolution before the
    United States Congress ... is a political issue by nature."

    The ADL said it has been "proud to work with Bedford, and we certainly
    hope to continue this vital work together." Furthermore, it hopes the
    town will not "rush to judgment" before the ADL National Commission
    addresses "this important issue further" at a November meeting.

    Chairman Angelo Colao said the selectmen do not intend to make any
    decision until after the ADL's November meeting.

    Baldauf said she agrees with the selectmen about not making any
    decisions, and indicated the December VPC meeting is the likely the
    earliest any measures would begin.

    Selectman Gordon Feltman said the board was "in the process of
    withholding judgment," and they not only wanted to see the ADL's
    November decision, but also any subsequent interactions between the
    local and national offices.

    The Armenian Genocide resolution is not new, Michael Bahtiarian said.
    It has come up continuously throughout the 20-plus years he has been
    active in Armenian-American issues, and Bahtiarian does not anticipate
    changes will come of the ADL's November meeting.

    So swift and significant action from the selectmen will be expected,
    since they plan to wait for the ADL's decision, Bahtiarian said.

    The "cynical and unprincipled" stance is tantamount to the U.S. State
    Department's backing of "every tin pan dictator in South America,"
    said Feltman, who was surprised by the ADL's national stance.

    However, with the New England branch "spear-heading the effort" and
    local groups embarking on a grassroots campaign, he is confident that
    the November meeting will lead to change.
    "I think your moment in history is coming," Feltman said.

    On Tuesday, Sept. 11, The Massachusetts Municipal Association Board of
    Directors issued a statement "on the importance of recognizing the
    Armenian Genocide and supporting the congressional resolution." The
    MMA, which was a founding co-sponsor of the No Place for Hate program,
    "applauds and supports the position of the New England Regional
    Director and New England Regional Executive Committee of the ADL for
    their leadership in calling for the unequivocal recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide and support for the Congressional Resolution before
    the U.S. House and Senate."

    The MMA statement also "respectfully calls on the national ADL to
    support the Congressional Resolution," and says the MMA will
    "subsequently re-evaluate its official sponsorship of the No Place for
    Hate program" pending the national ADL's decision.
    In other business:

    --Selectmen granted contracts for the re-roofing of the Town Center
    North Wing and portions of the Fire Station to WPI Construction, of
    Webster.

    --Selectmen approved an agreement between the DPW and M.E. O'Brien and
    Sons, of Medfield, for their services and furnishings for a new tot
    lot, which will replace the two existing tot lots in the Town Center
    area.

    Source: http://www.townonline.com/bedford/homepage/x775327 820
Working...
X