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ADL issue to go before selectmen Monday

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  • ADL issue to go before selectmen Monday

    ADL issue to go before selectmen Monday

    By Bryan Mahoney/Staff Writer
    GateHouse News Service
    New! Fri Sep 21, 2007, 11:28 AM EDT

    Lexington -

    Lexington's No Place for Hate Committee is expected to make a report
    to the Board of Selectmen Monday after being asked by Armenian
    residents to break ties with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).

    Though no decision was made by the No Place for Hate Committee Friday,
    some members said they would lean toward discontinuing that
    affiliation while others were reluctant to do so without further
    investigating the ramifications of that decision.

    "Being sponsored by the ADL is inconsistent with your mission to
    combat bias and hate," said resident Laura Boghosian as she read from
    a statement. "While we applaud the efforts of those within the ADL
    working to overturn a despicable policy, we believe it is an internal
    matter for that body. Our town should not be involved in the internal
    politics of outside groups."

    Until Friday, the No Place for Hate Committee had not formally
    addressed the ADL's partial acknowledgement of the Armenian genocide
    by the Ottoman Turks in the World War I era, or the ADL's stance on a
    resolution in Congress to designate the genocide as such. Several
    surrounding communities have either suspended or severed their ties
    with the ADL's No Place for Hate program since ADL regional director
    Andrew Tarsay was fired for acknowledging the massacre as genocide. He
    was later reinstated by national ADL director Abraham Foxman.

    Hank Manz, the Board of Selectmen liaison to the committee, said the
    Armenian group would be first up during the public comment of Monday's
    selectmen's meeting. He said the board would first like to hear from
    the No Place for Hate Committee on its meeting and what will be its
    next steps.

    Committee member David Horton felt this group should give a
    recommendation whether it should remain active with the ADL or cut its
    ties. The Board of Selectmen gave the official approval for the No
    Place for Hate committee in 1990.
    "I'm tilting toward leaving ADL," Horton said.

    No Place for Hate chairman Jill Smilow, who has been with the group
    since its inception, has said there is no "death grip" from the
    national ADL on the issue. As such, No Place for Hate can still carry
    on its human-rights mission without severing a relationship that has
    many benefits, she said.

    Olga Guttag, also a member of No Place for Hate, had misgivings about
    a local organization's affiliation with any national one - not just
    the ADL - if it means a local group must adopt national positions.

    "Local is local. We don't want to inherit anybody's agenda," she said.

    The Board of Selectmen meets Monday, Sept. 24 in the Selectmen's
    meeting room at Town Hall, 1625 Massachusetts Ave.


    Source: http://www.townonline.com/lexington/homepage/x4283 64787
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