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ANC of MA: Massuchesetts Court Dismisses Genocide Denial

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  • ANC of MA: Massuchesetts Court Dismisses Genocide Denial

    Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts
    47 Nichols Ave
    Watertown, MA 02472
    Tel. (617) 347-2833
    Email. [email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE

    June 10, 2009
    Contact: Shari Ardhaldjian
    Tel: (617) 347-2833

    MASSACHUSETTS COURT DISMISSES LAWSUIT DEMANDING
    INCLUSION OF GENOCIDE DENIAL IN SCHOOLS

    WATERTOWN, MA ? In a major setback for genocide denial, U.S.
    District Court Judge Mark Wolf today dismissed a case initiated at
    the prompting of the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    (ATAA) that would have compelled the inclusion of historically
    inaccurate Armenian Genocide denial materials in the Massachusetts
    education curriculum, reported the Armenian National Committee of
    Massachusetts (ANC of MA).

    "Today's judgment sends a clear message that the federal court
    system cannot be abused by genocide deniers to spread their lies
    across America's classroom," said ANC of MA Chairperson Shari
    Ardhaldjian. "We welcome this decision and the powerful precedent
    its sets for the future of genocide education here in the
    Commonwealth of Massachusetts and throughout the nation."

    The ATAA, according to media accounts, solicited the assistance of
    two local teachers, a student, and his parents to file the case
    against the state of Massachusetts in 2005. In February of 2006,
    the Armenian National Committee joined the Armenian Bar
    Association, Irish Immigration Society, Jewish Alliance for Law and
    Social Action, and the NAACP in filing an amicus brief in support
    of the Massachusetts Commonwealth's calls to dismiss the case.

    In his opinion, Chief Judge Wolf dismissed the case stating that
    the plaintiffs are "are not entitled to relief in federal court."
    The dismissal at this early stage of the proceedings is viewed in
    legal circles as meaning the cased lacked even minimal merit.

    This case is part of a larger strategy by Turkish American groups
    to use the legal system to harass human rights advocates on issues
    relating to the Armenian Genocide. The most recent instance is the
    lawsuit filed against the Southern Poverty Law Center for articles
    detailing Turkish government efforts to manipulate U.S. academia to
    deny that crime against humanity.

    The Massachusetts Genocide teaching guide was mandated to include
    the Armenian Genocide, following the August, 1998, unanimous
    passage of House Bill 3629, "An Act Relative to the Instruction of
    the Great Hunger Period in Ireland, the Armenian Genocide and the
    Holocaust." ANC chapters throughout Massachusetts had worked with
    bill authors, State Senator Steve Tolman and House Member Warren
    Tolman in support of the measure, which stated that, "The Board of
    Education shall formulate recommendations on curricular materials
    on genocide and human rights issues, and guidelines for the
    teaching of such material." The law specifically calls for the
    teaching of "the period of the transatlantic slave trade and the
    middle passage, the great hunger period in Ireland, the Armenian
    Genocide, the Holocaust and the Mussolini fascist regime and other
    recognized human rights violations and genocides."

    The ANC of MA continued to work with the Massachusetts Board of
    Education, providing information on peer-reviewed, teacher tested
    resources for inclusion in the teaching guide. In June of 1999, the
    ANC of MA protested the proposed inclusion of denial propaganda in
    the teaching guide that lobby groups, among them the ATAA, had
    pressured the Board of Education to add in its second version of
    the guide. In a letter to Massachusetts Governor Paul Cellucci, the
    chairmen of the state's four ANC chapters argued that inclusion of
    such websites "is directly counter to the intent of the law." The
    letter went on to note that, "careless intermingling of genocide
    denial with the documentary sources it aims to obscure, will only
    serve to confuse students and undermine academic integrity."

    In August of 1999, in a letter to the ATAA, made public as part of
    the lawsuit, the Board of Education argued that "since the
    legislative intent of the statute was to address the Armenian
    Genocide, and not to debate whether or not this occurred, the Board
    and Department of Education cannot knowingly include resources that
    call this into question." By October of 1999, the denial material
    was removed from the teacher's guide.

    In 2002, the ANC of MA again took action regarding the genocide
    curriculum, when a revised version which was up for review in May,
    against a proposal to remove the Armenian Genocide from the
    curriculum and replace it with a euphemistic and evasive reference
    to Armenian "slaughter." Community leaders again worked with
    Department of Education Commissioner David Driscoll to ensure that
    the proper terminology was maintained.
    From: Baghdasarian
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