Asks a Media Log reader:
Don't you think it's odd (and noteworthy) that the NY Times has not written one word on the Abe Foxman mess over the Armenian slaughter? It's about 10 days old and the Times has not seen fit to cover a story that's involved the govt [sic] of Turkey and one of the most prominent Jewish leaders in the US.
That does seem strange--and it's not just the Times: the Washington Post seems to have ignored the story as well.
Having said that, I'd add that the Globe's coverage of the issue was excellent, and that the Globe is part of the New York Times Company. (By "issue," I mean 1. Watertown's
exit from the ADL-sponsored "No Place for Hate" program over the ADL's refusal to label Turkey's early-20th c. slaughter of Armenians "genocide"; 2. the
firing of New England ADL head Andrew Tarsy, who criticized the ADL's position, and subsequent
pushback by Boston-area Jewish leaders; and 3. subsequent
reversal [or almost-reversal] by national ADL director Abraham Foxman.) But the Globe isn't America's paper of record. The Times is.
It's possible that the Times (and the Post) are leery of playing up a development which, as the Jewish Press
reported today, has already strained Israel's strategically vital relationship with Turkey. But concern for Israel's well-being needn't preclude critical reporting on the Armenian-genocide debate, as this excellent New Republic
piece recently demonstrated. The Boston ADL revolt and its aftershocks are a major national and international story; the Times ought to treat it as such.