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High Court Won't Hear Case Against Armenian Genocide

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  • High Court Won't Hear Case Against Armenian Genocide

    HIGH COURT WON'T HEAR CASE AGAINST ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    Lisa Redmond

    Lowell Sun (Massachusetts)
    January 26, 2011 Wednesday

    LOWELL -- "An abomination" is how Pearl Teague describes a
    Turkish-American group's attempt to use the nation's high court to
    force public-school systems in Massachusetts to include a viewpoint
    in the curriculum that denies there was an Armenian genocide after
    World War I.

    The court case drew attention because it brought into public classrooms
    the controversial, historical debate over whether the deaths of about
    1.5 million Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks could be labeled
    a genocide.

    But late last week, Armenians across the country and the approximately
    7,000 Armenians in the Lowell area applauded a U.S. Supreme Court
    ruling that refused to take up a case of the "contra-Armenian genocide"
    viewpoint.

    The Supreme Court declined to hear a First Amendment appeal in the
    Massachusetts' case of Griswold versus Driscoll.

    Theodore Griswold, a Lincoln-Sudbury High School student; his father,
    Thomas Griswold, of Sudbury; William Schechter, a Lincoln-Sudbury
    social-studies teacher; and Lawrence Aaronson, a social-studies
    teacher at Cambridge Rindge & Latin, along with the Assembly of Turkish
    American Associations, sued Massachusetts Commissioner of Education
    David Driscoll in federal court for not allowing their standpoint in
    statewide curriculum.

    Teague, a spokeswoman for the Lowell-based Armenian National Committee
    of Merrimack Valley, explained that the contra-genocide viewpoint
    for Armenians is "tantamount to denying the Holocaust" for the Jews.

    Joseph Dagdigian, a past chairman of ANC of Merrimack Valley, said
    the lawsuit is just another attempt by those who deny there was
    an Armenian genocide to "reach into American society and refuse to
    acknowledge that this was a planned genocide."

    Attorney Harvey Silverglate, one of the attorneys representing
    Griswold, described the case on his website as "an important First
    Amendment case involving censorship from school reference materials..."

    The Turkish-American group maintains that the Muslim Turkish Ottoman
    Empire did not commit "a policy" of genocide after World War I. While
    not denying the tragedy, Silverglate wrote, his clients "dispute the
    genocide label."

    The plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in 2005 in U.S. District Court in
    Boston alleging their First Amendment rights to learn, free from
    discrimination, were violated by eliminating from public-school
    materials viewpoints that suggest there was no genocide.

    The First U.S. District Court of Appeals in August affirmed a
    lower-court decision dismissing the lawsuit. When the high court
    decided not to tackle the issue, it allowed the appeals-court decision
    to stand.

    "This victory, while certainly a serious setback to Turkey's campaign
    of denial...will, just as surely, not mark the end of the concerted
    and well-funded efforts by allies of Ankara to use our nation's great
    freedoms to silence discussion of the Armenian genocide in America's
    classrooms," said Armenian National Committee of America Executive
    Director Aram Hamparian.

    "There will always be those who deny the genocide," said Teague. "But
    it legitimates that viewpoint if it becomes part of public-school
    curriculum. "

    As recently as two years ago, Vergin Mazmanian, then 100, a survivor of
    the 1915 Armenian genocide, spoke to Wilmington High School students
    about being rounded up by the Ottoman Army before daylight and forced
    to begin a death march with only the clothes on their backs.

    She told the students stories about hunger, suffering and watching
    family members die.

    Mazmanian never saw her home again.




    From: A. Papazian
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