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  • Human rights panel flouts mandate

    http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article ?AID=3D/20081202/OPINION/812020330

    Cape Cod Times
    Hyannis, Massachusetts

    December 2, 2008

    Human rights panel flouts mandate

    By SHAHKEH Y. SETIAN



    The Barnstable County Human Rights Commission, which has done some
    good work, claims that it takes human rights "very seriously"
    ("Commission supports 'No Place for Hate,'" My View, Oct. 20). The
    facts say otherwise.

    The commission still defends the national Anti-Defamation League and
    its so-called No Place for Hate anti-bias program even though the ADL
    denies the Armenian genocide and shamelessly collaborates with a major
    human rights violator, Turkey, in lobbying against recognition of that
    genocide.

    The national ADL's statement of Aug. 21, 2007, was the very opposite
    of the genocide acknowledgment that human rights advocates had long
    requested.

    It was deceptively worded so that the premeditated murder of 1.5
    million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 would not fit the official
    definition of genocide in Article II of the United Nations Genocide
    Treaty of 1948. Echoing Turkey's own denials, the ADL implied that the
    Armenian deaths were not intentional but rather merely a "consequence"
    of wartime conditions.

    The national ADL has yet to retract, apologize for or clarify that
    statement, though the ADL and Barnstable County Human Rights
    Commission would have you believe otherwise.

    Since that time, the city governments of Arlington, Bedford, Belmont,
    Lexington, Medford, Needham, Newburyport, Newton, Northampton,
    Peabody, Somerville, Westwood and Watertown have shut down their No
    Place for Hate programs in response to the ADL's anti-human rights
    actions against Armenians.

    Those cities and their human rights commissions realized that No Place
    for Hate, which the ADL created, trademarked, sponsored, funded and
    certified, had lost its credibility.

    While Barnstable County's commission has been burying its head in the
    sand, the ADL's assault on Armenians has become an international
    scandal, widely condemned by both Jewish and non-Jewish human rights
    advocates (please visit www.NoPlaceForDenial.com).

    Had No Place for Hate's sponsor denied the Jewish genocide and huddled
    with foreign lobbyists to persuade the U.S. to not recognize that
    genocide, the Barnstable County commission would long ago have
    rejected the program and its sponsor. The commission refuses to show
    similar respect for Armenians and their genocide.

    Frankly, this demonstrates that its seven members, sadly including
    those of Jewish descent who share the Armenian experience of genocide
    and denial, are giving preferential treatment to the ADL while
    discriminating against Armenians. The commission is violating its own
    charter, and the county is violating civil rights statutes.

    Every No Place for Hate chapter must be recertified annually by the
    ADL (local ADLs, by the way, answer to their national office in New
    York City). Meanwhile, the Barnstable County commission ignores the
    obvious: No civil or human rights program should be subject to review
    by a political group that lobbies against genocide recognition.

    Every No Place for Hate program, such as those in Barnstable,
    Falmouth, Harwich, Mashpee and Provincetown, must also have been
    formally approved by the municipality's public officials. It's
    inappropriate for those officials to have implicitly endorsed ADL
    policy. Moreover, No Place for Hate often invites ADL instructors
    into public schools. No instructor representing a political group
    that works to suppress genocide recognition should be lecturing public
    school children.

    The Massachusetts Municipal Association represents every municipality
    and its elected officials. It very publicly ended its umbrella
    sponsorship of No Place for Hate earlier this year because of the
    national ADL's unconscionable efforts against Armenians. The
    association recommended that No Place for Hate be replaced by the
    well-regarded Inclusive Communities program of the National League of
    Cities.

    Officials in Cape Cod communities with No Place for Hate programs need
    to seriously reflect on the civil and human rights principles that led
    the Massachusetts Municipal Association to make those decisions and
    that led 13 city governments and their human rights commissions to
    sever ties with the ADL program. The Barnstable County Human Rights
    Commission should do the same.

    If the commission doesn't sever ties with the ADL and rededicate
    itself to its mandate of truth, honor and non-discrimination, the
    commission must remove the "human rights" from its name.


    ***
    Shahkeh Y. Setian of Mashpee has taught the issue of genocide at Cape
    Cod Community College, and has also taught development in minority
    communities at Springfield College. She is currently writing a book
    about Muslims who saved Armenians during the Armenian genocide.
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