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The ADL and the Armenian Genocide:
CHRONOLOGY OF RECENT EVENTS
The timeline below describes the recent controversy over the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL), its policy on the Armenian
genocide, and the fate of its No Place for Hate (NPFH)
programs throughout Massachusetts. For a more in-depth
chronology, along with up-to-date news and information,
visit www.noplacefordenial.com
July 6
A letter to the editor by one Armenian-American—Newton,
Mass., resident David Boyajian—is printed in the Watertown
Tab. It is titled “Anti-Defamation League works against
recognition of Armenian genocide.”
July
Several letters are sent to the Watertown Tab, Boston Globe
and Watertown’s No Place for Hate program and the Watertown
Town Council.
Aug. 1
The Boston Globe first reports on the issue in a front-page
article titled “Antibias effort stirs anger in Watertown.”
When asked by the Globe if what happened to the Armenians
under the Ottoman Empire was genocide, ADL national director
Abraham Foxman replied, “I don’t know.” In the article, ANC
of Eastern Massachusetts chairwoman Sharistan Melkonian
accuses Foxman of engaging in genocide denial and states
that she will call for the Watertown NPFH program to sever
its ties with the ADL unless the latter acknowledges the
genocide.
Aug. 2
Petition requesting ADL to openly and unequivocally
acknowledge the Armenian genocide and support congressional
affirmation is launched in Watertown, Mass.
Aug. 14
The Watertown Town Council unanimously votes to become the
first town to sever ties with the ADL. The proclamation,
introduced by Watertown councillor-at-large Marilyn Petitto
Devaney, states: “The Town Council has become aware that the
ADL denies the facts of the horrific Armenian Genocide, that
occurred from 1915 to 1923. … The Town Council can not
continue to join with such an organization.”
Aug. 17
The New England regional ADL breaks ranks with the national
ADL, recognizes the Armenian genocide and calls for support
of H.Res.106. The NE regional director, Andrew Tarsy, is
fired soon after.
Aug. 18
The Boston Globe runs a front page article about Tarsy’s
firing.
Aug. 19
Two prominent board members of the NE ADL resign in protest.
Aug. 20
The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston and
13 other area Jewish organizations issue a statement
recognizing the Armenian genocide and standing in solidarity
with the NE ADL and Andrew Tarsy.
Aug. 21
The National ADL issues its now-infamous statement on the
Armenian genocide. It reads, in part: “We have never negated
but have always described the painful events of 1915-1918
perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as
massacres and atrocities. On reflection, we have come to
share the view of Henry Morgenthau, Sr. that the
consequences of those actions were indeed tantamount to
genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they would
have called it genocide. … Having said that, we continue to
firmly believe that a Congressional resolution on such
matters is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster
reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and may put at
risk the Turkish Jewish community and the important
multilateral relationship between Turkey, Israel and the
United States.”
The Human Rights Commission of Newton holds a meeting and
sends a letter to the ADL asking it to unambiguously
recognize the Armenian genocide, support H.Res.106 and
reinstate Andrew Tarsy as a condition for the continuation
of the ADL program.
Reacting to the ADL’s statement issued that morning, Newton
Mayor David B. Cohen said, “Whenever I saw the word
Armenian, in my mind I substituted the word Jewish. And
whenever I saw the word genocide, I substituted the word
Holocaust. And I said, would I be satisfied if this were the
response of my leaders? And the answer was no.”
Aug. 23
The national ADL issues a statement calling for “joint
commissions” to study the Armenian genocide.
Aug. 24
The government of Turkey condemns the ADL’s Aug. 21
statement.
Aug. 25
Turkey’s Prime Minister announces that the ADL’s national
director, Abraham Foxman, in a personal letter has
apologized for labeling the events a genocide.
Aug. 28
The national ADL reinstates NE regional leader Andrew Tarsy
stating that the NE ADL and the national ADL now see “eye to
eye.”
Aug. 30
A Jewish-Armenian solidarity event is held at the
Massachusetts State House.
Aug. 31
The town of Newburyport, Mass., sends a letter to the ADL
asking it to unambiguously recognize the Armenian genocide
and support congressional affirmation.
Armenians residents of Needham, Mass., ask the town to sever
ties with the ADL program. The Needham Human Rights
Committee sends a letter to the ADL.
Sept. 4
The Bedford, Mass., Violence Prevention Coalition demands an
explanation from the ADL.
Sept. 6
The Belmont, Mass., Human Rights Commission votes to
recommend that the town sever ties with the ADL.
Sept. 11
The Newton Human Rights Commission recommends to the Mayor
that the town cease participation in the ADL-sponsored No
Place for Hate program.
Sept. 12
The Massachusetts Municipal Association sends a letter to
the ADL calling on it to recognize the Armenian genocide and
support passage of the congressional resolution.
West Coast Armenian and Jewish community organizations urge
the ADL to end its opposition to Armenian genocide
legislation.
Sept. 17
The Belmont Board of Selectmen unanimously votes to sever
ties with the ADL.
Sept. 18
The Mayor of Newton severs ties with the ADL’s NPFH program.
Sept. 19
The Arlington, Mass., Human Rights Commission votes to
rescind endorsement of the ADL program citing the ADL’s
failure to support H.Res.106.
Sept. 24
The Lexington Board of Selectmen hold their first public
meeting to discuss the future of the town’s NPFH program.
The meeting is moved at the last minute from the Town Hall
to the auditorium to accommodate the larger-than-expected
number of local residents who wished to be heard on this
issue.
Sept. 27
Foxman meets with Erdogan and publicly reiterates opposition
to the Armenian Genocide Resolution and re-states his
support for Turkey’s calls for a joint commission of
historians.
Oct. 15
The Lexington Board of Selectmen votes to sever ties with
the ADL.
The Arlington Board of Selectmen votes to sever ties with
the ADL.
Westwood, Mass., votes to suspend ties with the ADL.
Oct. 17
The Medford, Mass., Human Rights Commission unanimously
votes to suspend ties with the ADL.
Oct. 19
The New York Times reports on the ongoing efforts in
Massachusetts towns to sever ties with the ADL.
Oct. 29
The AYF holds a vigil in front of the ADL’s national
headquarters in New York City.
Oct. 30
The Massachusetts Armenian community sends a letter to the
ADL National Commission on the eve of its annual meeting.
Co-signed by the ANC and the Armenian Assembly of
Massachusetts, the letter asks that “the ADL remain true to
its mission and fully and unequivocally acknowledge the
Armenian Genocide, refrain from advocating for Turkish calls
for a ‘historical commission,’ and express support for U.S.
recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Armenian-Americans
also rightfully expect an apology from Mr. Foxman for the
damage and pain the ADL’s actions and statements have caused
thus far.”
Nov. 1
A rally is organized in front of the ADL’s national
headquarters in New York.
Nov. 2
The ADL National Commission votes to “take no further action
on the issue of the Armenian genocide.”
Nov. 14
The Needham Human Rights Committee votes to suspend the
town’s membership to the NPFH program due to the ADL’s
failure to change its position on the Armenian genocide
following its Nov. 2 meeting.
Nov. 15
The Medford City Council votes to suspend the town’s NPFH
program due to the ADL’s failure to support national
recognition of the Armenian genocide.
Nov. 19
The Bedford Board of Selectmen votes unanimously to suspend
the town’s participation in the NPFH program.
Dec. 3
In the wake of an outpouring of community concerns and a
formal protest by the ANC-Glendale chapter, the Glendale
Unified School District accounces that a three-day seminar
organized by the ADL at Herbert Hoover High has been
postponed.
Dec. 4
The Needham Board of Selectmen votes to accept the Human
Rights Committee’s recommendation to suspend the NPFH
program over the ADL’s position on the Armenian genocide.
Andrew Tarsy announces his resignation as ADL’s NE regional
director. The Boston Globe reports that according to his
supporters, it is “the result of his rift with the ADL’s
national director, Abraham H. Foxman, over the genocide
issue.”
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