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  • Susan Galleymore interviews writer-activist David Boyajian

    June 16, 2008 - Raising Sand Radio Host
    Susan Galleymore interviews writer-activist David Boyajian

    Topic: Anti-Defamation League
    Denies the Armenian Genocide?

    Interview air date: Monday, June 16, 2008.

    The following is the transcript of the interview titled
    `Anti-Defamation League Denies Armenian Genocide?' on host Susan
    Galleymore's weekly Raising Sand program over radio station KZSU,
    90.1FM, Stanford, California.

    This interview can be heard at:
    http://www.raisingsandradio.blogspot.com/
    Audi o Length: 59:24

    For general information on the campaign against the Anti-Defamation
    League's denial of the Armenian Genocide, please see
    www.NoPlaceforDenial.com.


    Excerpts:


    `Groups like the ADL, for political reasons, have backed Turkish
    denials of the Armenian Genocide and have worked with Turkey to try to
    defeat these Armenian Genocide resolutions in Congress.'

    `Because Turkey felt it did not have enough lobbying power in the
    United States, it asked Israel if the Jewish American Lobby, the top
    Jewish lobbying groups, and just some of them and by no means all
    Jewish American groups, they asked if the Jewish lobbying groups could
    weigh in on the side of Turkey on all matters, not just the Armenian
    Genocide. And, unfortunately, those Jewish groups, such as the ADL,
    agreed to do so.'

    `Turkey is sometimes called a loyal ally. What kind of a loyal ally
    in NATO, for example, would make threats against the United States
    like Turkey has?'

    `The European Union, the European Parliament, countries like France,
    the Netherlands, Argentina, Russia, Lebanon, Greece have all
    acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, and nothing except token
    retaliation has taken place by Turkey against those countries or the
    European Union. So Turkey's threats are basically bluffs.'

    `[The national ADL] came out with a statement on August 21, 2007 that
    was a very carefully worded statement that some people think was an
    acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide, but it wasn't. It actually
    was very cleverly worded to actually contravene the official
    definition of genocide in Article Two of the UN Genocide Treaty of
    1948.'

    `You cannot be a human rights group, as ADL claims to be, and deny a
    genocide and work with Turkey to defeat Armenian Genocide resolutions.
    And this is an organization whose bread and butter issue is the
    Holocaust. `

    `It's been very satisfying to see all the friends, all the good
    people, all the principled human rights activists, Jewish Americans,
    many Jewish groups, come out and support us. And, so far in
    Massachusetts, of the some 60 towns that have been officially
    designated by the Anti-Defamation League, we've had 13 sever ties with
    No Place for Hate in protest of the ADL's genocide denial.'

    `Raphael Lemkin, although a survivor of the Holocaust himself who
    later came to America, actually cited the Armenian Genocide as the
    reason he became interested in genocide and coined the word. This is
    in a 1949 CBS television interview.'

    `Though I've criticized the ADL and American Jewish Committee here, by
    no means do they represent the Jewish community in regard to the
    Armenian Genocide. We have just had so much support from scholars on
    this issue. The International Association of Genocide Scholars, which
    has many, many Jewish academicians in it, has also officially
    recognized the Armenian Genocide. And they're the preeminent group in
    the world, experts on genocide.'

    `So the Turkish government knows this is a losing battle, I think.
    They're just trying to hold on by their fingernails.'

    `This campaign is continuing not just in Massachusetts. There are ADL
    programs such as World of Difference and No Place for Hate throughout
    the country in New York, California, particularly Santa Barbara. And
    Armenians in Santa Barbara are now targeting the University of
    California at Santa Barbara because it has a No Place for Hate
    program. Orange County has schools that are designated as No Place
    for Hate. Pennsylvania, Colorado, Texas, they all have No Place for
    Hate. And I hope people speak up when they see an ADL program and
    call the ADL and write their local newspapers and let them know about
    this issue, that they disapprove of the ADL's genocide denial.'

    ###

    Program:

    ANNOUNCER: You're in tune to KZSU Stanford. It's time for another
    edition of Raising Sand.

    GALLEYMORE: Welcome to another edition of Raising Sand Radio. I'm
    your host, Susan Galleymore. And the music heard is Armenian Duduk by
    Djivan Gasparyan, `A Cool Wind is Blowing.' Today we'll talk to David
    Boyajian about a campaign he started questioning the Anti-Defamation
    League's reluctance to call the Armenian Genocide just that, a
    genocide. We will spend the hour exploring this issue and learn more
    about Armenia, Armenians and the work to pass a resolution defining
    massive numbers of Armenian deaths in that region as a genocide. I
    asked David to describe the campaign.

    BOYAJIAN: This campaign that I kind of initiated with a letter, an
    article and then others joined in is that I've long known, and
    Armenians have known, and even Jewish Americans and Israelis admit
    that certain top-level Jewish American lobbying groups, some people
    call it the Jewish lobby, some call it the pro-Israel lobby,
    Anti-Defamation League, and groups such as American Jewish Committee,
    B'nai B'rith, AIPAC and JINSA, they made a deal with Turkey to work on
    their behalf in the United States because of the close relationship
    between Israel and Turkey. Armenians have been trying for years to
    get a detailed Armenian Genocide resolution through the US Congress,
    and they've been stymied. And these groups like the ADL, for
    political reasons, have backed Turkish denials of the Armenian
    Genocide and have worked with Turkey to try to defeat these Armenian
    Genocide resolutions in Congress. So this has been known for a long
    time what they've been doing. What happened last July in
    Massachusetts was that I noticed that the Anti-Defamation League was
    sponsoring a program, I read about this in The Boston Globe, a program
    known as No Place for Hate. It's an anti-bias program initiated and
    sponsored by the Anti-Defamation League. Now, No Place for Hate is
    actually a Federally registered trademark of the ADL - it owns it. No
    Place for Hate is in many towns in Massachusetts, including Watertown.
    When I read it was in Watertown, and Watertown is right next to where
    I live, I wrote a letter to the paper there, the Watertown Tab. And I
    said to them, you know, the town should not be sponsoring an anti-bias
    program affiliated with the Anti-Defamation League because the
    Anti-Defamation League denies the Armenian Genocide. This is a
    violation of No Place for Hate's own charter. No Place for Hate is
    supposed to stand against bias and in favor of human rights, and so is
    the ADL according to what it says. So what happened from there is
    things just snowballed. The No Place for Hate group in Watertown
    started to question the Anti-Defamation League. The Anti-Defamation
    League weighed in on this, the Armenian community and Jewish Americans
    weighed in on our side and against the Anti-Defamation League's
    genocide denials, and things just took off from there. It became a
    major issue in Boston papers such as The Boston Globe and Boston
    Herald and area papers, and soon it became an international issue.
    The Turkish ambassador to Israel had to fly back to Israel. He was
    out of the country. He had to fly back for consultations. And things
    have just snowballed from there.

    GALLEYMORE: Now, as I understand it, the regional offices of ADL are
    willing to negotiate or willing to look at this issue again, but the
    national tends to be harder core, is that right?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, partly. What happened is that there are many regional
    offices of the ADL all throughout the country. The one out here is
    the New England Regional ADL. And, when this broke, at first they
    defended themselves. They said that this was not the stand of the ADL
    to deny genocide. I think they were either being disingenuous or,
    perhaps, at the local level they really didn't know what the National
    Anti-Defamation League and its head Abe Foxman were up to. So they
    acknowledged the genocide. However, this was not sufficient for any
    of us because the National ADL is the one that really lobbies against
    us in Washington. So what happened is that Abraham Foxman, head of
    the National ADL, fired the New England regional head. And there was
    a big furor over that. He got reinstated at some point a couple of
    weeks later but then he had to, eventually he resigned. The heat was
    too much. But other regional Anti-Defamation Leagues outside New
    England, no, as far as I know they have not weighed in on this at all.
    And that is a disappointment.

    GALLEYMORE: OK. Yeah. What benefit is there to deny this genocide?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, actually, let me put it this way. There is no real
    benefit for anyone to deny this genocide. Turkey is nervous over it.
    Of course, it doesn't like to be accused of having committed genocide,
    but it's a moral issue. It's a moral issue. And the United States
    should pass a genocide resolution. Now, what happened between Israel
    and Turkey is a bit of a long story but, in a nutshell, the
    relationship between Turkey and Israel actually goes back decades.
    But it really took off in the 1990s with a series of trade agreements,
    military agreements, and intelligence agreements between the two
    countries because they each have a special relationship with the
    United States. Of course, Turkey being in NATO, Israel being a very
    favored nation. One of the deals there - and this is admitted to
    publicly by analysts, including the Anti-Defamation League and the
    American Jewish Committee - the deal there was that because Turkey
    felt it did not have enough lobbying power in the United States, it
    asked Israel if the Jewish American Lobby, the top Jewish lobbying
    groups, and just some of them and by no means all Jewish American
    groups, they asked if the Jewish lobbying groups could weigh in on the
    side of Turkey on all matters, not just the Armenian Genocide. And,
    unfortunately, those Jewish groups, such as the ADL, agreed to do so.
    And they've been doing this for a long time. It's not a secret. It
    hasn't been talked about all that much in the mainstream press, but it
    has been talked about somewhat. So that's where we're at today. And
    what happened is when I brought this issue up in Watertown, it
    resonated with people because it was at a very local level and people
    started questioning - wait a second - what is going on with the
    Anti-Defamation League? How can it sponsor No Place for Hate, an
    anti-bias group? So things just took off from there.

    GALLEYMORE: So it's not a question of in Armenia people asking for
    property back or asking for land back or anything like that. Does
    this have any relationship to what's going on in Armenia at this time?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, not exactly. Armenia itself has no claims or demands
    against Turkey except that it asks that Turkey acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide. Present day Armenia, independent since 1991 from
    the Soviet Union, has no land demands and has no demands for
    reparations because of the genocide. However, I have to say that
    these demands are in the background. They have been ever since the
    First World War, ever since the genocide, and ever since a document
    called the Treaty of Sevres which would have taken what is now part of
    Eastern Turkey called the Armenia Plateau, it would have made those
    part of an Armenian state and a Kurdish state, actually. But we see
    this as a moral issue mainly. Turkey has to come to terms with this
    because for it not to come to terms is destabilizing in the region and
    is also a continuing threat to Armenia. Imagine if Germany were
    located next to Israel and it had never admitted the Holocaust. Would
    not Germany then be a danger to Israel? Of course it would. So it's
    not really much different.

    GALLEYMORE: I wanted to start talking about the actual genocide
    itself, but first you mentioned that the Israeli military and the
    Turkish military have some work together.

    BOYAJIAN: Yes, they definitely work together. They hold naval
    exercises together with the United States each year in the
    Mediterranean.

    GALLEYMORE: Mediterranean?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. Israel has large contracts with Turkey, for example,
    to upgrade Turkish fighter jets. Turkey, in turn, lets Israeli pilots
    train over the very large land space of Turkey. It is also said that
    Turkey lets Israel make spy flights, listening flights along Turkey's
    southern border with Syria, Iraq and Iran in order to gather
    intelligence from those countries. I cannot confirm that. I don't
    know. That is what is often said, though. But there is a very deep
    tie there militarily. And, in fact, one could also say that the
    relationship between Turkey and Israel is defined at a military and
    intelligence level. An economic one, too, but this is something that
    the Turkish military holds quite dear to itself, the relationship with
    Israel.

    GALLEYMORE: I know during the era of the Shah in Iran the Israelis
    were working very closely with Iran at that point. Of course, that's
    apparently stopped now. But I didn't know about the connection with
    the Turks so that's very interesting.

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. It's widely admitted, actually. I know that some
    people think that because Turkey is a Muslim populated country now -
    of course, it wasn't always that way - there were millions of
    Christians there until the Greeks, Assyrians and Armenians, until the
    early 20th century when Turkey basically wiped them out - but people
    think that because Turkey is a Muslim country that somehow it wouldn't
    be friendly with Israel. But this is not the case, you see, because
    of the dynamics going on there. Turkey and Israel see the Arab
    nations and Iran as common adversaries so they've kind of joined
    together in this sense to oppose those countries. They don't always
    talk about it openly but, for example, Syria. Now, if Syria tries to
    make a move against Israel, it's very hesitant to do that because
    Syria is more or less boxed in on the north by Israel's friend,
    Turkey. So if the Turks try to aid the Israelis then the Syria would
    have to fight a two-front war there, and that would be very difficult.
    So that's one of the subtexts of the relationship, and it's very
    important.

    GALLEYMORE: The other thing is that there are lots of Armenians in
    Syria and also in Lebanon. I was in these two areas in 2006 and
    actually had quite a lot of contact with Armenians in Lebanon. The
    little town of Anjar, for example, is predominantly Armenian. So when
    the Diaspora happened during the genocide, people just scattered,
    those that were not killed just scattered all into the region, didn't
    they?

    BOYAJIAN: That's true. Actually, Armenians have lived throughout that
    area for hundreds of years. But it's true that after the genocide a
    lot of them, the survivors did find a home, a very welcome home in
    places like Lebanon and Syria and Iraq and Iran and then Palestine.

    GALLEYMORE: In Palestine, too?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. Absolutely.

    GALLEYMORE: I know in the old city of Jerusalem there is an enclave of
    Armenians. But in Palestine, for example, in the West Bank, is that
    what you're suggesting?

    BOYAJIAN: I'm not sure about the West Bank but certainly Jerusalem and
    in Israel proper today.

    GALLEYMORE: OK. Interesting. And, yet, let's go back to Turkey for a
    moment saying that one of the reasons they don't want to stir up this
    hornet's nest, and that's my language, is that they don't want to
    destabilize the Jewish communities in Turkey.

    BOYAJIAN: You mean the pro-Israel lobby here has a fear of that?

    GALLEYMORE: That's what they're saying, yes, that if they talked about
    this as a genocide, there's a possibility of endangering the Jewish
    communities.

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. This has been claimed by the Anti-Defamation League,
    but it is absolutely untrue. Jewish groups here do not particularly
    fear that. In fact, Jewish groups here, such as the ADL, have given
    awards to Turkish leaders over the years for being tolerant, for being
    democratic, supposedly. Now, if it were true that the pro-Israel
    groups here such as ADL and American Jewish Committee were fearful of
    what would happen to the Jews living in Turkey, one would think that
    they would have spoken out about this before. For example, Abraham
    Foxman and the ADL always speak out very strongly against
    anti-Semitism in any country. And they are very critical of those
    countries. And they don't seem to fear retaliation about Jews,
    against Jews, for example, in Iran. The ADL, the United States, all
    the Jewish groups are very critical of Iran and its alleged
    development of a nuclear capability. There are many Iranian Jews.
    And, yet, the ADL doesn't seem to fear that. No, this is just an
    excuse. It's a cover for a political agreement between Turkey, Israel
    and the pro-Israel lobby here.

    GALLEYMORE: And there is also some truth to the notion that genocide
    itself is such a hot button word. I mean we saw what happened in
    Rwanda, for example. The Clinton Administration decided they were not
    going to label what was going on there a genocide simply because it
    sounded like they didn't want to send in any troops to quell that
    aggression.

    BOYAJIAN: Right. Well, of course, that was a current genocide. The
    Armenian Genocide happened years ago, and so there's no such question
    of sending in troops or anything like that.

    GALLEYMORE: It's really symbolic, isn't it, in a lot of ways.

    BOYAJIAN: It's symbolic and it's a necessary thing, really, because if
    the United States, which claims to have a very moral foreign policy,
    does not acknowledge a well-known genocide, what does that do to its
    credibility? How can it then go out and tell other countries to
    reform in terms of human rights if the United States is being so
    hypocritical about the Armenian Genocide? This is not to say that US
    policy would be perfect just because it acknowledged the Armenian
    Genocide. No, absolutely not, of course. But it would help. But for
    the US to not acknowledge the Armenian Genocide, and the last two
    administrations, Clinton and George Bush have not done so, it's a
    political thing. And it really hurts US credibility, even more than
    it is hurt already.

    GALLEYMORE: That's already down.

    BOYAJIAN: So on October 10, 2007, the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    voted 27 to 21 to bring the 1915 genocide resolution to a vote on the
    floor. And at that point Turkey responded with anger. And, in fact,
    it never came up, did it, never went anywhere?

    GALLEYMORE: No, it didn't. Nancy Pelosi could have brought it up for
    a vote, but there was so much controversy at the time with Turkish
    threats that it was decided that it was best to leave it for another
    time. So it is still pending and it will be brought up again. I
    don't know when, perhaps soon. We don't know. But let me say this
    about Turkish threats. Turkey is sometimes called a loyal ally. What
    kind of a loyal ally in NATO, for example, would make threats against
    the United States like Turkey has? For example, it said it would shut
    down air bases and it would --

    GALLEYMORE: In fact, it actually did at the beginning of the invasion
    of Iraq, didn't it, refuse the United States air space?

    BOYAJIAN: It did. During the run-up to the war, it actually kept US
    ships waiting off the coast for weeks or months and then finally
    decided that it would not allow the US to use it as a transit point.
    It didn't actually shut down the bases. It just denied them air
    space.

    GALLEYMORE: And, in fact, the United States went along with it.
    Turkey subsequently retracted that. And I think the United States is
    busy in there at this point, isn't it?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes, US aid to Iraq does go through Turkey. Let me say
    something, though, about the Turkish threats here, Susan, that the US
    is the super power here and Turkey cannot go through with any of the
    threats it makes to the United States in terms of shutting down the
    Incirlik Air Base or closing the border with Iraq. The United States,
    if it puts its foot down, is simply too powerful to let Turkey do any
    of those things. Turkey depends so much on the United States for
    weaponry, military aid, economic aid through the World Bank and
    International Monetary Fund, and US backing for Turkish membership for
    the European Union. Turkey is massively dependent on the United
    States.

    GALLEYMORE: The United States does this every now and again. It
    certainly bends backwards for Israel. And it seems like Turkey might
    be another one of those client states.

    BOYAJIAN: Well, it does. I must say, Turkey has a habit of throwing
    temper tantrums against the United States. But, you know, let me
    point to the fact that the European Union, the European Parliament,
    countries like France, the Netherlands, Argentina, Russia, Lebanon,
    Greece have all acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, and nothing except
    token retaliation has taken place by Turkey against those countries or
    the European Union. So Turkey's threats are basically bluffs.
    Actually, in many cases, after those countries acknowledged the
    genocide, trade between Turkey and those countries went up. So Turkey
    really needs those countries more than those countries need Turkey.
    And it will not go through with the threats it makes, but other
    countries have to be firm with Turkey and say, look, we're going to
    acknowledge the genocide, and we're sorry if you don't like it, but
    it's a moral issue, and we're going to do it and we're not going to
    allow you to retaliate.

    GALLEYMORE: And is it likely that if they did not acknowledge this
    genocide they would not be admitted into NATO, in the EU, excuse me?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, what I can tell you is that the European Union
    Parliament voted that, I believe it was in 1987, it was a nonbinding
    vote, but it did say this: It said that Turkey must admit - must
    acknowledge - the Armenian Genocide before it can get into the
    European Union. So, in other words, this is a condition that they
    have placed. Now, it's not legally binding. It was advisory on the
    part of the European Parliament. However, it still stands. And the
    European Parliament has since passed similar resolutions, so there is
    pressure on Turkey to do this.

    GALLEYMORE: That's kind of a conundrum for Turkey, in that case,
    because they desperately want to get into the EU.

    BOYAJIAN: What they're counting on, unfortunately, is European Union
    weakness in regard to not just the Armenian Genocide issue but the
    issue of Turkish internal reforms, freedom of speech, not having the
    military intrude into civilian political affairs, for example.

    GALLEYMORE: Let me remind our listeners that we're talking with David
    Boyajian about the letter that he wrote to a local newspaper in
    Watertown, Massachusetts in which he took to task the Anti-Defamation
    League's position on No Place for Denial.

    BOYAJIAN: No Place for Hate. No Place for Denial, actually, is the
    activist website, www.NoPlaceForDenial.com. It's a nice website. It
    gives the whole history of the campaign. I hope people visit it.

    GALLEYMORE: So, David, you started this thing that has really grown.
    And how is that for you? Is this something that you're pleased with
    or is it something that you feel overwhelmed by at this point? I mean
    it's pretty heavy stuff.

    BOYAJIAN: It is because it's considered, in some circles, in the
    mainstream media, for example, and among elected officials, they
    hesitate to critique groups like the ADL. Of course, it's been very
    satisfying to see all the friends, all the good people, all the
    principled human rights activists, Jewish Americans, many Jewish
    groups, come out and support us. And, so far in Massachusetts, of the
    some 60 towns that have been officially designated by the
    Anti-Defamation League and by the town government themselves - that's
    a stipulation that the ADL makes, that the government has to approve
    the placement of No Place for Hate in the city or town - of those 60
    towns, we've had 13 sever ties with No Place for Hate in protest of
    the ADL's genocide denial. So we're very pleased with that. Also,
    just recently, the Massachusetts Municipal Association, which is a
    trade association of all the cities and towns in Massachusetts, itself
    is a sponsor of No Place for Hate, and it voted to sever ties with No
    Place for Hate. So this was a big blow to the Anti-Deformation League
    and genocide denial. And the campaign continues here.

    GALLEYMORE: And what are they doing in response to this, the ADL?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, the ADL tried to argue at first that it did not do any
    of the things we said it was doing. It claimed that it did
    acknowledge the Armenian Genocide and so forth. Actually, it isn't
    true that they ever acknowledged it. And they came out with a
    statement on August 21, 2007 that was a very carefully worded
    statement that some people think was an acknowledgement of the
    Armenian Genocide, but it wasn't. It actually was very cleverly
    worded to actually contravene the official definition of genocide in
    Article Two of the UN Genocide Treaty of 1948. That article says that
    in order for an event to be genocide, the perpetrator has to have the
    intent - that's the key word - has to have the intent of committing
    genocide, but the ADL statement did not use the word or even imply the
    word intent. Rather it said - this is a quote - the consequences of
    those actions by Turkey were tantamount to genocide. By using the
    word consequences, they made it seem as if the deaths, the murders of
    Armenians were simply a consequence of war and not an intentional act
    by Turkey. Now, this is well-known. I don't know how the ADL ever
    thought it could get away with making such a legalistic statement like
    that. It wasn't an acknowledgement. I call it an
    anti-acknowledgement. And it was roundly criticized for that. So,
    even to this day, it has not acknowledged the Armenian Genocide. In
    general, Susan, the ADL has been very inarticulate in combating us
    because we really have the arguments on our side. You cannot be a
    human rights group, as ADL claims to be, and deny a genocide and work
    with Turkey to defeat Armenian Genocide resolutions. And this is an
    organization whose bread and butter issue is the Holocaust. And for
    it to ask everybody, as is proper, to acknowledge and commemorate The
    Holocaust and, yet, at the same time deny another genocide that
    preceded The Holocaust and that many consider was a model for Nazi
    Germany to kill Jews in The Holocaust, they considered this just, it's
    just unacceptable. It's very hypocritical. And the same goes for the
    other groups I mentioned, American Jewish Committee, which is almost
    as bad, if not worse, than the ADL, actually.

    GALLEYMORE: David, why do you say that it was almost modeled by the
    Turkish Genocide against the Armenians?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. Well, there are a few reasons. I would cite two.
    First of all, Hitler knew about it because Germany and Turkey were
    allies in World War I. Hitler was in Germany while certain trials
    were taking place of Armenians who had assassinated former Turkish
    officials who had conducted the genocide. Hitler also spoke of the
    Armenian Genocide before he invaded Poland. He referenced that. The
    other reason, Susan, and this is very interesting, listeners may not
    know this but the word genocide was coined only in 1944 by a
    Polish-Jewish lawyer named Raphael Lemkin. Lemkin, although a
    survivor of the Holocaust himself who later came to America, actually
    cited the Armenian Genocide as the reason he became interested in
    genocide and coined the word. This is in a 1949 CBS television
    interview and it's in a documentary video by Andrew Goldberg. And
    it's very revealing. So, yes, if the person who coined the word
    genocide thinks it's a genocide and used the Armenian Genocide as a
    model then, yes, that's a connection with Nazi Germany.

    GALLEYMORE: Interesting. I know that, for example, the Kurds also
    participated in the deaths of the Armenians, though, didn't they?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes, very much, both the Turks and Kurds did as the Armenian
    death marches took place. Armenian men, women and children were lead
    through the mountains under terrible conditions. The Turkish guards
    would let the villages - Turkish and Kurdish villages - ravage the
    caravans, carry off the women or murder them or steal from them. I
    will say this, some Kurdish groups have apologized, in the current day
    have apologized for what their compatriots did in 1915, and that's
    appreciated. And even some individual Turks, some Turkish groups, and
    now increasingly Turkish historians do recognize that there was a
    genocide, but the Turkish government will not recognize that.

    GALLEYMORE: There's also another piece to do this for the Armenians
    which is to, correct me if I'm wrong here, but psychologically to have
    this recognized as something perpetrated against your people and to
    acknowledge the suffering of your people is a big thing, too, isn't
    it?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes. You know, there's a genocide scholar who lists what he
    calls, I believe, the eight stages of genocide. One of those stages
    is denial itself. In other words, he says that it psychologically
    damages the survivors and their descendents when you tell them that
    the genocide never occurred. So the Turks are not even really
    allowing the Armenians the memory of this. They're trying to kill the
    memory.

    GALLEYMORE: Now, David, your parents, your family is Armenian.

    BOYAJIAN: Yes.

    GALLEYMORE: When did they come to the United States?

    BOYAJIAN: Actually, my family, both sides of my family, were fortunate
    enough to arrive in the United States well before the genocide, in the
    late 19th and early 20th century. My father's mother did go through
    the 1890s massacres, however. There were terrible massacres. Up to
    300,000 Armenians were killed in the 1890s. This was 20 years before
    the actual big genocide in 1915. I am told that my grandmother - I
    was too young to know this at the time - I'm told my grandmother used
    to wake up here screaming in the middle of the night because of
    nightmares she would have about what she experienced.

    GALLEYMORE: And what stimulated those attacks?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, Armenians were very much oppressed in that era. There
    were periodic massacres, onerous taxation. The Turkish government
    would let the Kurds come into town and rob and pillage Armenians. So
    what happened in the 1890s was that there arose Armenian revolutionary
    movements and self-defense movements, and the Turks came down even
    harder on Armenians.
    And there were massive occurrences of massacres at that time. So, in
    effect, massacres had taken place before the revolution. Then, when
    Armenians tried to defend themselves, and actually they tried very
    much through the central government to enact reforms, there was an
    Armenian Constitution declared in the Turkish Empire. This is what
    we're talking about, Armenians within the Turkish Empire, Ottoman
    Empire. But the Armenian Constitution, the Ottoman Armenian
    Constitution was never put into effect. So Armenians were subject to
    massacres. And when they protested and tried to defend themselves
    there were even more massacres.

    GALLEYMORE: But, at that point, they weren't driven from the land or
    the towns?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, they were. There were deportations. Entire villages
    would be destroyed and Armenians would have to move out if they
    survived. In order to decrease the population of Armenians in certain
    regions where there are a lot of Armenians, what would happen is that
    the Turks would deport Armenians to other areas because they did not
    want an Armenian majority anywhere because they were concerned, they
    knew that the Armenians were indigenous people and that they had a
    claim to that land. Therefore, the Turks wanted to disperse Armenians
    as much as possible.

    GALLEYMORE: So, when you were growing up, you were aware that you had
    this history. Did people talk about it?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, it was talked about in the family. One would often go
    to lectures given by academicians about the subject. Many Armenians
    had, and still have some very old survivors who would relate their
    stories of what actually happened during the genocide. Yes, it was
    talked about in my family quite a bit.

    GALLEYMORE: What I'm going to do is play some clips from videos where
    a couple of survivors - now, these must have been very young children
    at the time - talk about the 1915 to 1923 massacres.
    Now, here is audio testimony from survivors of this genocide presented
    at the Arlington, Massachusetts town meeting in October 2007 when
    Arlington's Board of Selectmen met to discuss the town's association
    with the ADL. The meeting concluded with the board voting unanimously
    to sever ties with the Anti-Defamation League citing the ADL's failure
    to unambiguously acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. The first clip
    shares a testimony of an Armenian survivor speaking at the meeting.

    NORIAN: My name is Kevork Norian, and I am a survivor of two
    genocides. But history, if it's not that great, is fiction. And the
    value of history is its accuracy. So where do we go to learn the
    truth of a Turkish general who is blackmailing American Congress for
    discussing the Armenian Genocide and telling that there will be grave
    consequences if they recognize - they destroyed two other nations -
    what several nations recognized. Hitler, in one of his speeches,
    said, who talks about Armenian Genocide today, meaning that Jewish
    Genocide also will be forgotten soon. Even Hitler admitted. Henry
    Morgenthau was an American Ambassador from 1914 to 1916 in Istanbul,
    and he was an eyewitness and saw everything that happened there. And
    he wrote a book, and the title of the book is Henry Morgenthau's
    Story. In his book he explains what happened, why it happened, how it
    could be prevented. Now, there were several missionaries working in
    Turkey with Armenians. They founded seven colleges, a theological
    seminary, and a missionary hospital. In 1915, when the Turks entered
    the war, they returned home. On their way, they met the Ambassador
    and told him what they saw, all those heinous atrocities that were
    being committed towards Armenians. Mrs. Morgenthau day after day
    listening to these stories became so nervous she couldn't take
    anymore. She left her husband and came to New York. So the
    Ambassador remained one year away from his wife. In his book, he also
    mentions that The New York Times was printing daily events what was
    going on in Turkey. An Armenian historian, Mr. Peter Balakian, goes
    to the Library of Congress and studies those written about Armenians
    and writes this book The Burning Tigris. It is about Armenian
    Genocide and the American reaction. In those days, Americans were
    very sympathetic to Armenians. The missionaries with Armenians came
    from Boston, and in Boston Faneuil Hall they founded a relief
    committee. Then the committee moved to New York City and it was
    headed by Mr. Franklin Roosevelt, so they get $5 million and saved
    6,000 orphans and many Armenians who had lost everything. And in this
    book also I have a picture, I wish everyone saw it. They gave this
    picture to the Sunday school children to collect money, and it is
    right here. I have given a copy of this book, one to Boston Library
    and the other one to the Robbins Library. Anyone who is interested
    can read this book and get a good idea what happened to Armenians.
    Now, the two Jeune [Young] Turks in the military, when they lost the
    war, they escaped to Germany. And an Army captain named Mustafa Kemal
    declares himself the president of Turkey. He continued the same
    policy, ethnic cleansing policy toward the Armenians. In 1918, the
    war ended and the British came to the Southwestern part of Turkey,
    which the Armenians called it Giligia. And they remained there eight
    months. During those eight months, Armenians had prosperity and
    peace, but it did not last long. During the War, the British and the
    French were allies. After the War they became enemies, so the British
    moved out and the French moved in. When the British rule was moving
    out they gave weapons to the Turks and told them to fight the French,
    but they couldn't fight the French. They turned to Armenians who had
    survived the genocides. I was born in Aintab. Now they changed the
    name to Gaziantep, which means victorious. Can anyone meet the Turk
    Ambassador and ask him, why did you change this name?
    Now, two Armenian heroes in Aintab, they decided they are going to
    defend the people. So all the Armenians united, and they defended
    themselves for eleven months. After eleven months, the Turks ran out
    of ammunition and food so they asked ceasefire. The Turks in turn see
    this ceasefire as a victory. Armenians were not fighting for victory.
    Armenians were fighting for self-defense. Armenians were happy that
    the war ended, but it did not last long. From Paris came order to the
    French general to move out of Turkey and settle in Syria, so we moved
    to Syria. We came to the United States, they accepted us, they
    treated us with respect and dignity, and they saved us from havoc.
    So, thank you, United States, for saving us. A lot of our relatives
    are still living in hell. Give a good hand to this noble nation, the
    United States of America. [APPLAUSE]

    GALLEYMORE: The second shorter clip shares Kevork Norian, also of
    Arlington, Massachusetts recalling escaping the Armenian Genocide.

    NORIAN: My father, in 1915, when the Turks entered the War, because he
    was in manufacturing clothing, and the Turks, having two million
    soldiers, they needed clothing, they took my father from Aintab and
    took him to Haleb [Aleppo, Syria] for the production. So, for three
    years, he worked for the government. And the families of those who
    were working for the government were exempt from deportation. So that
    was the first genocide that we were saved. And the second genocide
    was in Aintab when they were going to kill everyone, Armenians made
    self-defense. So that's the second genocide, which was minor compared
    to the first one. So they saved my life. I owe my life to those two
    great leaders.

    MAN: And then your family was forced, you were forced to move to Syria
    after that, correct?

    NORIAN: Well, Syria, when we came to Syria, Haleb was an old city and
    a small city. About 100,000 Armenians came there. There was no
    housing and a lot of people built some of the small shacks. They
    lived there for 20, 25 years. And about a hundred or more families
    with one bathroom, and you had to stay in line because there was no
    sewer. In the bathroom you had to hold your nose, it was so stinky.
    A lot of Armenians would, when they left Turkey, they came and lived
    in these conditions.

    MAN: What would you tell to someone who doesn't know what happened?

    NORIAN: You know, the world does not understand our pain. We were so
    hurt. We needed some people to understand us so that you could feel
    better. But too many people do not care, you know, or they side with
    the denials. Where did ADL get its information, that they are
    denying?

    GALLEYMORE: Two other Massachusetts towns, Lexington and Westwood,
    voted on the same day, Monday, October 15th, to break ties with the
    Anti-Defamation League and its No Place for Hate program due, as we
    heard from David Boyajian, to the ADL's failure to unambiguously
    acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. In addition, two days later, the
    Medford Human Rights Commission unanimously voted to suspend ties with
    the ADL. As you heard from David, this has started a chain reason
    around the country and the No Place for Hate, which you may even have
    in your neighborhood. I know I do. On another note, the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee passed the measure 27 to 21 Wednesday
    evening, though President Bush and key figures lobbied hard against
    it. In the end, the resolution was not passed. President Bush
    reiterated his opposition to the resolution saying its passage would
    be harmful to US relations with Turkey. David, the issue here is not
    that the genocide has not been confronted, for it is being confronted.

    BOYAJIAN: It is being confronted, actually. For example, I think it
    was 1997, 126 Holocaust scholars signed a petition affirming the
    Armenian Genocide. In fact, I have to say, even though I've
    criticized the ADL and American Jewish Committee here, by no means do
    they represent the Jewish community in regard to the Armenian
    Genocide. We have just had so much support from scholars on this
    issue. The International Association of Genocide Scholars, which has
    many, many Jewish academicians in it, has also officially recognized
    the Armenian Genocide. And they're the preeminent group in the world,
    experts on genocide. So, you know, it's really silly for Turks and
    their friends to deny the genocide at this point.

    GALLEYMORE: And yet it happens, and it happens with such vehemence.

    BOYAJIAN: It does, but they are losing the battle. More and more
    countries are recognizing it. Scholars are recognizing it. You know,
    it's interesting, just very recently a scholar by the name of Donald
    Quataert who is an expert on Turkish history, he was a top member of
    the Institute for Turkish studies in Washington funded by the Turkish
    government. He just acknowledged that the Armenian Genocide occurred.
    This was in a book review he was doing. Because he acknowledged the
    genocide the Turkish government fired him. So the Turkish government
    knows this is a losing battle, I think. They're just trying to hold
    on by their fingernails.

    GALLEYMORE: And the archives in Turkey must contain some of this
    history surely.

    BOYAJIAN: They do, actually, although we feel that they have probably
    been cleansed of the most incriminating documents. However, the
    scholars that have been able to get in there have uncovered very
    incriminating material. And, in the United States archives, there is
    plenty of material because the United States had an ambassador there,
    Henry Morgenthau, and it had also representatives in other parts of
    the Turkish Empire, including the Armenian part. So it is known in
    American archives and in other archives exactly what happened.

    GALLEYMORE: David, where can people go to find out more online? Do
    you have a website? You've mentioned NoPlaceForDenial.com.

    BOYAJIAN: Yes, that's for the campaign itself against ADL genocide
    denial. I would also suggest Armenian-genocide.org. That's Armenian
    dash genocide dot org. They have lots and lots of documentation on
    that website. It's the website of an Armenian-American think-tank and
    study group in Washington. And if they go, by the way, to the No
    Place for Denial dot com website, I would also like them to note that
    this campaign is continuing not just in Massachusetts. There are ADL
    programs such as World of Difference and No Place for Hate throughout
    the country in New York, California, particularly Santa Barbara. And
    Armenians in Santa Barbara are now targeting the University of
    California at Santa Barbara because it has a No Place for Hate
    program. Orange County has schools that are designated as No Place
    for Hate. Pennsylvania, Colorado, Texas, they all have No Place for
    Hate. And I hope people speak up when they see an ADL program and
    call the ADL and write their local newspapers and let them know about
    this issue, that they disapprove of the ADL's genocide denial.

    GALLEYMORE: David, I want to thank you for being with us. That's
    David Boyajian today. And, again, if you're listening and you have
    some comments about this, send me an email at
    [email protected]. And if we have people who, in fact, do
    write in, I'm going to invite you back, David, to see what we have
    going on, you know, where people's concerns are, what they have to say
    for themselves.

    BOYAJIAN: Thanks so much, Susan. I really appreciate being on your
    program.

    GALLEYMORE: That was David Boyajian on his campaign to have the
    Anti-Defamation League unequivocally recognize the Armenian Genocide.
    On a final but related note, Canadian Prime Minister Steven Hopper
    apologized June 11, 2008 to Canada's native people for, as he put it,
    a sad chapter in our history acknowledging the physical abuses and
    cultural damage they suffered during a century of forced assimilation
    at residential schools. Over more than a century, about 150,000
    native Canadian children were sent to boarding schools run by churches
    and the government to, as they put it, civilize and Christianize them.
    Expressions of native heritage were also outlawed and many children
    suffered sexual and psychological abuse and grew up with neither
    traditional roots nor mainstream footing, their ties to family and
    community unraveled. Steven Hopper said, today we recognize that this
    policy of assimilation was wrong, has caused great harm and has no
    place in our country. The government now recognizes that the
    consequences of the Indian Residential Schools Policy were profoundly
    negative and that this policy has had a lasting and damaging impact on
    aboriginal culture, heritage and language. The apology was billed by
    the government as a chance to redress a dark chapter in Canadian
    history and to move forward in reconciliation. On February 14, 2008,
    Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, made a formal apology for a
    century of taking aboriginal children from their families and forcing
    them into institutions far from their homes. Reading from a motion
    that was unanimously accepted Wednesday by lawmakers on behalf of all
    Australians, Rudd said, we apologize for the laws and policies of
    successive parliaments and governments. Australia's apology was
    directed at tens of thousands of aborigines who were forcibly taken
    from their families as children under now abandoned assimilation
    policies. To the mothers and fathers, the brothers and the sisters,
    for the breaking up of families and communities, we say sorry. And
    for the indignity and degradation that's inflicted onto proud people
    and a proud culture we say sorry. So apologies are not that
    far-fetched. And that's our show for today. Thanks for listening to
    Raising Sand Radio and KZSU Stanford. And, as always, if you want to
    listen to any of our archived shows, visit our website at
    www.raisingsandradio.org. The website and archive presents our shows
    according to themes and you can search the site for show topics. You
    can also visit our blog at http://raisingsandradio.blogspot.com where
    you can comment on our shows. And you're invited to email me at Susan
    at Raising Sand Radio and suggest shows you'd like to hear in the
    future. Again, if you have any comments about today's show, send me
    an email, [email protected]. And, if there is enough of a
    conversation, we can bring David Boyajian back in and continue this
    conversation. Meanwhile, if you want to know more about the Armenian
    Genocide, visit the website David mentioned, Armenian Genocide, that
    is www.armenian-genocide.org or the blog NoPlaceForDenial.com. PBS
    also created a DVD called the Armenian Genocide that you can find at
    www.shopPBS.com. Music we've heard today is from Life Aid Armenia and
    the album is called `I Will Not Be Sad In This World.' It's Duduk
    music from Armenian Djivan Gasparyan, dedicated to his people killed,
    injured or made homeless by the December 1998 earthquake in that
    region. The first piece we heard was `A Cool Wind is Blowing' and
    we'll go out with the piece called `I Will Not Be Sad In This World.'
    [END]
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