Hamas: A Step forwards or back? Yousef Munayyer
January 30, 2006Special to American Arab Forum
The headlines came pouring in. “Shock” was the theme in most of them- utter
disbelief. To me this was the first indication that Hamas’ victory in the
elections for the Palestinian Legislative Council was justified. If you were
shocked, or even surprised at the outcome of these elections then like much of
the international community you are totally disconnected from the Palestinian
people. This outcome has been in the making for a long time.
We can not forget that Hamas has had a well funded and experienced campaign
manager: Israel. Every action Israel has taken in the past six years has played
into the hands of Hamas. Some have naively argued that only the withdrawal from
Gaza boosted Hamas over the top but the reality is Hamas has earned Palestinian
popular support long before the Gaza withdrawal.
Some have also suggested that corruption in Fateh has led the election of Hamas.
Surely allegations of corruption have hurt Fateh but that it was the deciding
factor is a myth propagated by the west and Israel to redirect the blame. Israel
aided in the creation of Hamas to factionalize the Palestinian movement. Today
they behold the fruits of their labor.
So why did Palestinians vote overwhelmingly for Hamas? For a change, for a
catalyst, for something different than the devastating conditions within which
they live. The question remains whether or not Hamas will be able to provide
that change.
Many have said Hamas is much smarter politically than other Palestinians
parties. I had doubted this for years as I watched their leaders assassinated in
broad daylight until they decided to go underground. Yet if Hamas is as smart as
they are made out to be they will know they can not provide a better life for
Palestinians through waging war against Israel. It is clear that Israel is the
dominant force and it will continue to use force as it chooses.
Immediately Hamas will be thrown into a world of words. They will be asked to
recognize Israel’s “right to exist”. This is a concept I still do not
understand. Rights are granted by law, God, or the barrel of a gun (depending on
your particular belief) but now where can I find it written that any “state” has
a right to “exist”. The question in itself is ridiculous. It takes the right of
existence, granted only to human beings, and applies it to a state which in this
case exists at the expense of other human beings. Lunacy aside Hamas will still
have to play the game.
Hamas will be forced to change. They are no longer and outside party yelling in.
Now they are part of the political system with responsibilities and
expectations. This is a framework they are not accustomed to and have no
experience in. The true challenge for Hamas will be avoiding falling into the
trap that Arafat fell in. In balancing between denouncing terror and resisting
the Israeli occupation Arafat found himself cornered in a basement in Ramallah
with no protest from the United States. In terms of relations with the US, Hamas
has to dig upwards to get to that point. In essence Hamas must play a more
difficult balancing act than Arafat did.
Unlike the PLO however Hamas is a home grown organization. An offspring of the
Muslim Brotherhood, morphed in Palestinian refugee camps, the Islamic Resistance
Movement is living with the people. The PLO spent years fighting for the cause
outside of the occupied territories. From Bierut to Tunisia the PLO represented
a population they were physically distant from. Some would argue that even upon
their arrival to the occupied territories they remained distant.
With all this being said where we stand today is not very different from where
we were last week, a month ago, or 20 years ago. The only things that continue
to change is the increasing number of lives destroyed, settlements expanded, and
years of ongoing occupation. The powers that be will try to tell us things are
different and that the players have changed. I continue to look at the map, the
people, and the geography and still over all these years I see only two players
the occupier and the occupied, the colonizer and the colonized.
The late Yasser Arafat told the United Nations in 1974 that he had a rifle in
one hand and an olive branch in the other. The Palestinian Liberation
Organization was eventually recognized and set at the negotiating table. For
many Palestinians the past 15 years of negotiation have produced no results.
Today, a young Palestinian population, many of them too young to remember the
hijackings of the 70s, let alone the Nakba of 1948, has elected a party which
looks much like the PLO did only 20 years ago.
Many will attempt to factionalize the Palestinian people now. The election
changes the conventional wisdom with which many approached the conflict. Do not
be confused: this is still a struggle for freedom and land - It always has been.
We will see the media use the results of this election to portray a religious
conflict yet nothing could be further from the truth. The key issues have not
changed. After years of being neglected by the international community and
inferring that international law and ideas of human rights applies to everyone
but them, the Palestinian people have grown tired of the status quo. The biggest
question is whether the leadership of Hamas will be able to provide results with
even less to work with than their predecessor.
Hamas must play a leading role but not a dictating role. As long as the
Palestinian national interest directs the agenda Hamas can be just another
Palestinian party fighting for the same cause. The only thing we know for
certain is that any success for Palestine will come through unity and all it
failures will come from the divisions imposed upon it by its enemies.
Yousef Munayyer, is a recent graduate of the University of Massachusetts in
Political Science and History with a minor in Middle East Studies and a
certification in International Relations. Mr. Munayyer is a regular contributing
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