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10,000 Sign Online Petition Urging U.S. Recognition Of Armenian Geno

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  • 10,000 Sign Online Petition Urging U.S. Recognition Of Armenian Geno

    10,000 SIGN ONLINE PETITION URGING U.S. RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Asbarez
    Thursday, May 20th, 2010

    Signatories exemplify widespread support of Armenian Genocide
    recognition and genocide prevention advocacy

    BOSTON, MA - A petition campaign created by a broad coalition of
    Boston-area Jewish and Armenian groups and community members has
    surpassed its original goal of 10,000 signatures and continues to gain
    support. The online petition hosted by Change.org urges U.S. officials
    to stand up to Turkey's multi-million dollar campaign of genocide
    denial, specifically calling on Congress and President Obama to
    officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    While the organizers are based in Boston, the petition has spread
    throughout the country reaching every state and hundreds of cities.

    "When you look at the diversity of those who signed the petition, it
    is clear that there is a strong demand by Americans throughout the
    country that the United States recognize the Armenian Genocide. It
    demonstrates that this is not simply an Armenian issue, but a powerful
    call to align America's foreign policy with human rights and historical
    truth," said ANC member and coalition co-chair Laura Boghosian.

    The petition's letter to members of Congress and President Obama
    states, "As we confront the specter of genocide and its denial in the
    21st century, our government has a duty to ensure that the lessons of
    the past are not forgotten. The time is long overdue for the United
    States to stand up to Turkish pressure and join the 43 individual U.S.

    states and numerous countries and international bodies that have
    affirmed the Armenian Genocide."

    The 10,000-signature mark comes just weeks after President Obama
    refused to properly recognize the Armenian Genocide. "Even though
    President Obama failed to honor his pledge this past April 24th, we
    will continue to fight for truth and justice. Through generating a
    groundswell of public support that we know exists, we will lead our
    elected officials to do the right thing and recognize the Armenian
    Genocide," said Ara Nazarian, co-chair of the Armenian National
    Committee of Massachusetts.

    The coalition is an outgrowth of a dialogue between members of the
    Boston-area Jewish and Armenian communities that was initiated by
    Rabbi Howard L. Jaffe of Temple Isaiah, Lexington, Massachusetts,
    in reaction to the Anti-Defamation League's lobbying for the Turkish
    government against affirmation of the Armenian Genocide. Rabbi Jaffe
    first advocated recognition of the Armenian Genocide in October 2007,
    when he told the New York Times that he must do what is "right and
    righteous." In 2008, he co-authored an article with Boghosian that
    condemned the Anti-Defamation League's (ADL) lobbying and called upon
    the Jewish community to join in efforts to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide. He also invited the local Armenian community to participate
    in a joint Holocaust-Genocide commemoration at the temple, inviting
    Dr. Richard Hovannisian to speak on the parallels between the Armenian
    Genocide and the Holocaust.

    Joining Rabbi Jaffe and Ms. Boghosian on the steering committee
    of the dialogue group were Rabbis Ronne Friedman and Elaine Zecher
    of Temple Israel in Boston, ANC member Dikran Kaligian, and Temple
    Isaiah members Howard Cohen and Alan Millner. Others active in the
    work of the coalition are Herman Purutyan of the Armenian Assembly,
    women's health advocate Judy Norsigian, and Eric Cohen, chair of the
    Massachusetts Coalition to Save Darfur.

    Individuals and activists representing an impressive collection of
    Boston-area anti-genocide and community organizations participated
    in dialogue meetings over the past year, and groups elsewhere have
    endorsed the work of the coalition.

    The effort was supported by the Armenian National Committee of
    Massachusetts (ANC-MA), the Armenian American Action Committee
    of Massachusetts (ARAMAC-MA), and Investors Against Genocide,
    a broad-based coalition formed as a result of the grassroots "No
    Place for Denial" campaign spotlighting the ADL's denial of the
    Armenian Genocide. Although the ADL has stated that the death of 1.5
    million Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government was "tantamount
    to genocide," it continues to speak out against U.S. affirmation of
    that crime against humanity. Complete details of the campaign can be
    viewed at www.noplacefordenial.com.

    Click here to sign the petition.

    To learn more about the initiative, the complete list
    of co-sponsors, and the Armenian Genocide, visit:
    http://www.recognizearmeniangenocide.org.
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