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	Natural Flow of History:  
	Hamas Should Rethink Charter  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 28, 2011  
	    “Now it is time to naturalize the flow of history,” wrote Ahmet 
	Davutoglu, Turkey’s Minister of Foreign Affairs (British Guardian, March 
	16).   The process of naturalization is now underway in the region 
	Davutoglu refused to describe as the Middle East (arguing that the term is “orientalist”, 
	and preferring to call the region “West Asia and the south Mediterranean”). 
	  Davutoglu is one of the most articulate and passionate Turkish 
	politicians of the Justice and Development Party (AKP). Along with Recep 
	Tayyip Erdoğan and Abdullah Gül, he has labored to naturalize the flow of 
	history in Turkey, sidelining an incessantly intrusive military, and forging 
	links between regions, cultures and competing political thoughts. While the 
	mission was and remains arduous, it has successfully led to the emergence of 
	a unique Turkish political thought - proud of its roots, yet receptive to 
	progress and modernity.    When Hamas was elected as the majority 
	party at the Palestinian Legislative Council in 2006, the group was inspired 
	by the objectives that propelled the AKP. Ahmed Yusuf, a top Hamas official 
	in Gaza, has even been writing a book entitled, “Erdoğan and a New Strategic 
	Vision”   “Erdoğan’s model is liberal. It is a model that dares to 
	take responsibility and change things and establishes good relations between 
	the religious and secular elements of society,” Yusuf said, according to 
	Turkey’s Hurriyet (June 10, 2010). “It is a model that works for democracy 
	and human rights, and supports an open society. That is what we want.”   
	In fact, this is precisely what most ordinary Palestinians want for 
	themselves. It’s also the same desire that inspired several Arab 
	revolutions. The same goals were ferociously defended and largely achieved 
	in Tahrir Square in Cairo. Palestinians also wish to see their society free 
	of narrow factional interests and limited political agendas.    
	Despite every attempt, whether through siege, wars or protracted 
	bombardments, radicalization has not taken a hold in Palestinian political 
	thought. Of course, there is much anger and a continued desire for justice, 
	but political rhetoric in Gaza (and by other Hamas leaders in Diaspora) 
	seems largely prudent and increasingly universal in its values and outreach.
	   Exiled senior Hamas leader, Khaled Meshal, commenting on the 
	Egyptian revolution, claimed: “Today we are witnessing Cairo returning to 
	its natural state, after it disappeared from that state for a long time. The 
	people in Egypt and Tunisia have given us back our lives.” (Khartoum, March 
	6)   The massive revolutionary undertaking by Arab peoples is allowing 
	the Arabs to determine their own fate, to chart their own course for a 
	better future, and on their own terms. Davutoglu has advised that this 
	undertaking also comes with challenges; if Arabs fail to overcome these, 
	they will “lose the momentum of history”.    Palestinians don’t need a 
	regime change, per se, as in other Arab polities, for they are under siege 
	and military occupation, and have no true political sovereignty on the 
	ground. They need a roadmap, a new vision that is inspired by the rights and 
	aspirations of Palestinian people everywhere, but also free from the 
	conventional wisdoms that were either enforced by Oslo – which fragmented 
	Palestinian society – or by those who offered alternatives based mainly on 
	ideological, factional or religious rationale. This painful period of 
	Palestinian history, marred by factionalism, disunity and civil strife, has 
	diverted from the natural flow of Palestinian history. Now, we speak of 
	Hamas and Fatah, of West Bank and Gaza, of individuals, of personal 
	initiatives, of NGOs and funding, and of everything except one Palestine, 
	one Palestinian people, one goal, one strategy, and one destiny.    
	What is happening in Palestine is anti-history. It cannot be sustained for 
	long without exacting an even heavier price from Palestinian people and 
	their internationally recognized rights. The very credibility of any 
	Palestinian leadership, of course, has now been greatly eroded.    
	Hamas, since its official inception in 1987 –and even prior to that, when 
	the Islamic movement was dedicated mainly to charity work and institution 
	building –  has proved capable of changing and growing. Its growth has 
	not been based on the diktats of Israel or any outside power, but rather its 
	own motivations. It is now a political body that has managed to evade 
	numerous Israeli bombs and attempts at undermining it as a legitimate group. 
	It is regarded highly among many segments of Palestinian society, and 
	international public opinion is also now shifting in a similar direction. 
	For example, “45% of Europeans believe Hamas should be included in the Peace 
	Process (and) only 25% believe it should be excluded,” according to an ICM 
	European poll conducted in January 2011.    This time of people 
	marching for change, freedom and democracy in the region should provide the 
	perfect opportunity for Palestinians to break away from political 
	exclusivity and the localization of their struggle for freedom. Hamas should 
	now re-think its charter of 1988, which was once an almost impulsive rally 
	cry, and which will always be used in the interests of those seeking to 
	discount Hamas’ credibility. The language of the charter might have served a 
	purpose in the past, but it fails to live up to the of the expectations of a 
	people who wish for unity and to see past the confines of Oslo, its ‘peace 
	process’ and its wealth-amassing elites. Post-Oslo Palestinian leaderships 
	require new language, new ideas, new approaches, and most certainly a brand 
	new vision and strategy.    There must be a break with the past. All 
	hurdles need to be removed in order for the natural flow of history to 
	resume. This is the most opportune time for Hamas to revisit and amend its 
	charter, and to resume the process of change and self-correction which it 
	began many years ago. The political landscape in Palestine will certainly 
	experience serious changes in coming months and years. Genuine Palestinian 
	leaderships must anticipate and accommodate a new era. It is what the people 
	want, and what history repeatedly shows.    - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), available on Amazon.com. 
	 
       
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