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Town Hits ADL Stance On Genocide

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  • Town Hits ADL Stance On Genocide

    TOWN HITS ADL STANCE ON GENOCIDE
    By Laura M. Colarusso, Globe Correspondent

    Boston Globe
    September 20, 2007
    United States

    NEEDHAM

    Needham officials are lashing out at the Anti-Defamation League for
    the reluctance of its national leadership to fully recognize the
    Armenian genocide, but have stopped short of withdrawing from the
    ADL's No Place for Hate program, as Watertown and Newton have done.

    The town's Human Rights Committee has demanded that the ADL recognize
    the deportation and killing of more than 1 million Armenians by the
    Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923 as a genocide.

    No Place for Hate, a program designed to help towns foster respect
    and diversity, has come under intense scrutiny since August, when the
    national ADL's position on the Armenian genocide prompted officials
    of Watertown to withdraw from the program.

    On Tuesday, Newton Mayor David Cohen said he would accept the
    recommendation of his city's Human Rights Commission and drop out of
    No Place for Hate until the national ADL definitively recognizes the
    historical events in question as genocide.

    ADL Executive Director Abraham Foxman has stated that the atrocities
    were "tantamount" to genocide. The ADL's regional office in New
    England has labeled what happened to the Armenians a genocide

    Needham officials say the ADL's inability to accurately describe the
    atrocities undermines the goal of the No Place for Hate program.

    ADL officials from both the national office in Washington and
    the New England office in Boston did not respond to calls seeking
    comment. However, a message on the organization's website states
    that the ADL continues to characterize a proposed congressional
    resolution on the matter as "a counterproductive diversion [that]
    will not foster reconciliation between Turks and Armenians."

    Needham's Human Rights Committee earlier this month sent a letter
    to the national ADL offices in Washington, D.C., asking that it
    reconsider its position and back legislation labeling as genocide
    the mass killings of Armenians.

    "The ADL has asked us to detach the 'No Place for Hate' program from
    the controversy surrounding its positions regarding the Armenian
    genocide," the letter states. "We are unable to do so. We cannot
    proudly cite our town as 'No Place for Hate' when the sponsoring
    organization is not doing all in its power to work against hate
    and oppression."

    The ADL is expected to reexamine the issue at its November meeting,
    but Needham's human rights group is hoping that the issue will be
    taken up sooner, said Debbie Watters, committee chairwoman and author
    of the letter. Her panel is waiting to hear from the ADL before making
    a recommendation to selectmen as to whether they should cut ties with
    the No Place for Hate program.

    Needham's Board of Selectmen is waiting to hear from the Human Rights
    Committee before it makes a final decision on whether to remain in
    the No Place for Hate program, said Gerald Wasserman, chairman of
    the board.

    Selectman John Bulian also expressed concern with the ADL's perspective
    on the issue, but said Needham needs more information before making
    a decision.

    "We can always sever ties, but it's more important that the national
    ADL change its position," Bulian argued. "Once you've severed ties
    with an organization, what's their incentive to change?"
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