Laura Boghosian
After years of equivocation, Anti-Defamation League National Director
Abraham Foxman has publicly acknowledged that the Turkish massacres of
the Armenian people constituted genocide.
This recognition comes after a seven-year campaign in which the
Armenian and Jewish communities, as well as human rights activists and
local officials, demanded that the ADL affirm this historical truth.
The announcement that Foxman would deliver the keynote address and
receive an honorary degree unleashed widespread criticism that the
university planned to honor a man who refused to issue a clear statement
on the Armenian Genocide and who actively lobbied against its
recognition.
Groups including the Suffolk chapter of the National Lawyers Guild,
Suffolk student organizations, the Armenian Bar Association, Suffolk
alumni, and others called on Suffolk to rescind its invitation. When
Suffolk refused, several faculty members carried small Armenian flags in
silent protest onto the stage where Foxman spoke.
Foxman’s Suffolk remarks stand in contrast to the ADL’s 2007
statement that the “consequences” of the Turkish government’s actions
were “tantamount to genocide.” The Armenian community and its
supporters rejected that statement as its qualifiers circumvented the
intent required by the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention.
An ADL statement one year later that alleged it had “referred to
those massacres and atrocities as genocide” was likewise rebuffed as it
only “referred” to the unacceptable 2007 statement. Recent claims by
Foxman and the ADL that this 2008 release clearly and unequivocally
acknowledged the Armenian Genocide are false.
Since that time, human rights activists have continued to press the
ADL for an unequivocal acknowledgement, as well as an end to its
lobbying for the Turkish government to prevent passage of a
Congressional Resolution affirming the Armenian Genocide.
“Abe Foxman’s reference to the Armenian massacres as genocide,
without any qualifiers, is a welcome change,” stated Herman Purutyan,
Massachusetts chair of the Armenian Assembly of America. “Even though
Foxman continues to assert that he had previously acknowledged the
genocide, the basis for his claims are a chain of statements, at the
root of which is the 2007 statement full of qualifications, intended to
obfuscate the question. We expect that Foxman’s statement at Suffolk is
not only his personal view, but that it also reflects ADL’s official
position. ADL should confirm this by publishing an unequivocal
statement on its website, and joining in the efforts to have the U. S.
Congress recognize the Armenian Genocide by passing the resolution
currently before it.”
Foxman’s remarks reflected growing support by Jewish organizations
for recognition of the Armenian Genocide. In March, ADL New England
Regional Director Robert Trestan was quoted stating that the ADL “now
fully recognizes the Armenian genocide without reservation.”
The following month, the American Jewish Committee issued a release
that read, “We pause in mournful tribute to the memories of the
estimated 1.5 million victims of the Meds Yeghern, the Genocide of
Armenians, committed in the final years of the Ottoman Empire.”
Describing the genocide as “an unspeakable crime against humanity,” the
AJC called upon the Turkish government to confront the truth. ”
Finally, the Israeli Knesset discussed recognition of the Armenian
Genocide at a plenum on May 13. A motion by the left-wing Meretz party
to recognize the genocide before its 100th anniversary next year
received support from across the political spectrum, including from the
rightist coalition government.
“These reversals of position by major Jewish organizations are quite
significant for all those committed to recognition of the genocides of
the past century,” stated Dikran Kaligian, chairman of the Armenian
National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts. “No longer will Turkey be
able to exploit the differences between the positions of these
organizations’ leadership and their membership — the vast majority of
whom want nothing to do with Turkey’s genocide denial campaign.”
Locally, the Coalition to Recognize the Armenian Genocide was
established in 2008 to foster communication between the Armenian and
Jewish communities and to raise awareness of the Armenian Genocide
within the Jewish community. Its objectives include advocating for
official recognition of the genocide by the United States government.
Coalition members include representatives from the Armenian National
Committee of America and the Armenian Assembly of America.
The coalition facilitated contacts between Armenian activists and
members of the ADL and created an online petition calling on Congress to
recognize the Armenian Genocide that has gathered over 21,000
signatures to date.
"Asbarez," May 23, 2014
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