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  • Anti-Defamation League's N.E. Director To Step Down

    ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE'S N.E. DIRECTOR TO STEP DOWN

    Jan 28, 2013, 6:52am EST Updated: Jan 28, 2013, 7:38am EST

    Courtesy ADL
    Derrek Shulman is resigning as the head of the regional Anti-Defamation
    League. He took over after a 2007 controversy over the organization's
    treatment of the Armenian genocide.

    Mary Moore Reporter- Boston Business Journal

    Derrek Shulman, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League
    (ADL) in New England, has announced he will resign from his position
    effective January 31.

    Shulman made his decision known to the ADL's board of directors in
    a recent email, which cited the challenge in balancing "the demands
    of a growing office with the interests of my young family.

    "In his email, Shulman said he plans to "move onto the next challenge
    and, especially, spend more quality time with my wife and children."

    Shulman took over leadership of the regional ADL after a period of
    instability for the organization. His predecessor, Andrew Tarsy,
    was fired in August 2007 for opposing the national organization's
    position on the Armenian genocide that started in 1915, which Tarsy
    argued the ADL should acknowledge.

    The ADL re-hired Tarsy a week after firing him, but he resigned from
    the organization in December of that year. Meanwhile, at least two
    well-known board members - Stewart Cohen, former chairman of the
    Polaroid Corp., and Boston City Council member Mike Ross - resigned
    from the ADL's New England board of directors in response to Tarsy's
    firing.

    At the time, the ADL issued a statement acknowledging that "the
    painful events of 1915-1918 perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against
    the Armenians" were "tantamount to genocide." The statement reiterated
    the ADL's position opposing formal recognition of the Armenian genocide
    by Congress.

    Today, as Shulman put it, the ADL is on "a high note." For example,
    he said, the organization has more than doubled its annual campaign
    in less than five years.The annual campaign is now $4.43 million,
    Shulman said in his email, making the New England region the second
    largest of the ADL's 28 regions, up from fifth place.

    In addition, the organization added more than 25 directors to its
    board since 2008, including some from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
    and Central Massachusetts.Among other achievements that Shulman noted:

    In 2011, the organization hosted an event titled "The New
    Anti-Semitism," featuring Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel at Faneuil Hall,
    which drew 1,000 attendees.

    In 2010, the organization built a coalition to support legislation
    that later became the anti-bullying law in Massachusetts.

    In 2009, the organization created the Latino-Jewish Roundtable,
    to develop allies and understanding.

    Clarification: An earlier version of this story noted that the ADL
    has not changed its position against recognizing the Armenian genocide.

    However, the ADL did issue a statement in 2007 calling it "tantamount
    to genocide."

    http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/blog/mass_roundup/2013/01/derrek-shulman.html?page=all

    For more information on the ADL's continued denial of the Armenian
    Genocide, visit:

    www.noplacefordenial.com,
    http://www.noplacefordenial.com/2007/08/press-kit-history-of-lobbying-against.html
    http://npfdinfo.blogspot.com/ http://npfdnews.blogspot.com/



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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