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  • No place for genocide denial

    Commentary: No place for genocide denial

    By Laura Boghosian
    GateHouse News Service
    Thu Sep 20, 2007, 05:40 AM EDT

    Lexington -

    Can a program that combats hate crimes be sponsored by an organization
    engaged in genocide denial?

    Not according to Boston-area No Place for Hate communities that have
    cut ties with the program sponsored by the Anti-Defamation League, due
    to that organization's refusal to recognize unambiguously the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Last month, Watertown's Town Council voted unanimously to withdraw
    from the NPFH program. Arlington's NPFH steering committee also voted
    to suspend its involvement.

    Belmont's Human Rights Commission next voted unanimously to recommend
    their Board of Selectmen sever ties. Likewise, Newton's Human Rights
    Commission voted unanimously "to immediately cease participation"
    until the ADL "unequivocally recognizes the Armenian Genocide and
    actively supports" a congressional resolution affirming the genocide.
    Several other communities are debating withdrawing.

    Concerned town residents are asking Lexington also sever its
    association with the No Place for Hate program.

    During "the first genocide of the 20th century," 1.5 million Armenians
    were massacred beginning in 1915 by the Ottoman Turkish government;
    survivors were exiled from their ancient, ancestral homeland. Many of
    the genocide's perpetrators later held high government positions in
    the new Republic of Turkey. Turkey denies it committed genocide
    against the Armenians.

    Yet the word "genocide" was coined by Rafael Lemkin, a Polish-Jewish
    lawyer, who said he "became interested in genocide because it happened
    to the Armenians" and the Turkish "criminals were guilty of genocide
    and were not punished." This travesty emboldened Hitler: he justified
    his invasion of Poland by asking his generals, "Who today, after all,
    speaks of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    In 1997, the world's foremost organization of genocide experts, The
    International Association of Genocide Scholars, unanimously passed a
    formal resolution that affirmed the Armenian Genocide. Responding to a
    2005 call by the Turkish prime minister for "impartial study by
    historians," the IAGS branded this not scholarship, but propaganda, in
    order "to absolve the perpetrator, blame the victims, and erase the
    ethical meaning of this history."

    Numerous countries, including Canada, France, Russia, Sweden, Italy,
    Argentina, Lebanon, and Germany have formally recognized the Armenian
    Genocide; in Switzerland, it is a crime to deny it.

    Currently, there are resolutions before Congress to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. Similar resolutions have been blocked for years by
    Turkey and American Jewish organizations, including the ADL.

    Numerous reports in the Jewish press detail the ADL's lobbying against
    recognition, including efforts earlier this year after meeting with
    Turkey's foreign minister.

    As the ADL's position on the Armenian Genocide became widely known,
    the local Jewish community and others engaged in human rights work
    strongly supported Armenians. Pressure from the ADL's New England
    region and its director forced the ADL to reevaluate its stance on the
    genocide.

    Thus, on Aug. 21, the ADL announced, "We have never negated but have
    always described the painful events of 1915-1918 perpetrated by the
    Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as massacres and atrocities ...
    the consequences of those actions were indeed tantamount to genocide."

    This cleverly worded statement, however, is not an acknowledgment of
    the Armenian Genocide. First, there is the qualifier "tantamount."
    More critical, however, is the word "consequences." The international
    legal definition of genocide rests upon "intent." Turkey acknowledges
    many Armenians died as a consequence of World War I conditions. It
    denies, however, there was an intentional policy of genocide. With its
    duplicitous phrasing, the ADL abets Turkey's genocide denial.

    Further, the ADL reiterated its refusal to support the congressional
    resolution recognizing the genocide, calling it "a counterproductive
    diversion."

    On Aug. 23, echoing Turkey's call for "impartial study," the ADL
    suggested "further dispassionate scholarly examination" of the
    genocide. Would the ADL advocate this with Holocaust deniers?
    Clearly, the ADL has not changed its egregious behavior.

    In fact, the Turkish press reports the ADL wrote to Prime Minister
    Erdogan, expressing its sorrow for the discomfort the so-called
    acknowledgement caused Turkey's leadership and people. Erdogan
    announced, "The wrong step that has been taken is corrected ... They
    said they shared our sensitivity and expressed the mistake they made
    [and] will continue to give us all the support they have given so
    far."

    Which brings us back to Lexington and its No Place for Hate program.
    There can be no doubt that Lexington's group of dedicated volunteers
    has done extremely valuable work in our community.

    Yet this crucial work is compromised by its ADL association. Genocide
    denial is the final stage of genocide. An organization that engages in
    genocide denial does not have the moral authority to sponsor a human
    rights organization. After all, rights must be for all, not just for
    some.

    Lexington is a caring community that abounds with intelligent, active
    citizens. There is no reason we cannot independently, through a
    town-sponsored committee, continue human rights work without the
    baggage that comes with ADL sponsorship. Lexington should do the right
    thing and join our neighbors in severing ties with the ADL.

    Laura Boghosian is a resident of Russell Road.

    Source: http://www.townonline.com/lexington/opinions/x4283 62967

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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