Hamas New Charter Accepts the Two-State Solution
for Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May
18, 2017
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New Charter: Should Hamas Rewrite the Past?
Now that the Palestinian Islamic Movement, Hamas, has officially changed
its Charter, one should not immediately assume that the decision is, in
itself, an act
of political maturity.
Undoubtedly, Hamas' first Charter,
which was released to the public in August 1988, reflected a degree of
great intellectual dearth and political naïveté.
"Allah is
great, Allah is greater than their army, Allah is greater than their
airplanes and their weapons," the original Charter partly read.
It called on Palestinians to take on the Israeli occupation army,
seeking "martyrdom, or victory", and derided Arab rulers and armies:
"Has your national zealousness died and your pride run out while the
Jews daily perpetrate grave and base crimes against the people and the
children?"
This may seem foolishly worded now. But back then,
the context was rather different.
The document was released a
few months after the formation of Hamas, itself created as an outcome of
the Palestinian Uprising of December 1987, which saw the killing of
thousands of Palestinians, mostly children.
At the time, the
Hamas leadership was a grassroots composition, consisting of school
teachers and local imams and almost entirely made up of Palestinian
refugees.
While Hamas founders openly attributed their ideology
to the Muslim Brotherhood Movement, their politics was, in fact,
formulated inside Palestinian refugee camps and Israeli prisons.
Despite their desire to see their movement as a component of a larger
regional dynamics, it was mostly the outcome of a unique Palestinian
experience.
True, the language of their Charter, at the time,
reflected serious political immaturity, lack of true vision and an
underestimation of their future appeal.
However, it also
reflected a degree of sincerity, as it accurately depicted a rising
popular tide in Palestine that was fed up with Fatah's domination of the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).
Fatah, along with other
PLO factions, became increasingly disengaged from Palestinian reality
after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982.
The invasion of
Lebanon saw the dispersal of the Palestinian national movement abroad
among various Arab countries, headquartered mostly in Tunisia. In Tunis,
Palestinian leaders grew wealthy, but offered nothing new, except for
tired clichés of a bygone era.
The 1987 Intifada was a
reflection of popular frustration, not only with the Israeli military
occupation, but the failure, corruption and irrelevance of the PLO.
Thus, the formation of Hamas in that specific period of Palestinian
history cannot be understood separate from the Intifada, which
introduced a new generation of Palestinian movements, leaders and
grassroots organizations.
Due to its emphasis on Islamic (vs.
national) identity, Hamas developed in parallel, but rarely converged
with other national groups in the West Bank and Gaza.
The
national movements operated under the umbrella group, the United
National Front for the Intifada, representing PLO's affiliates inside
Palestine. Hamas operated largely alone.
Towards the end of the
Intifada, the factions clashed, and directed much of their violence
against fellow Palestinians. Thanks to internal divisions, the Intifada
was exhausted from within, as much as it was mercilessly beaten by
Israeli occupation soldiers from without.
Yet Hamas continued to
grow in popularity.
Part of that was due to the fact that Hamas
was the reinvention of an older Islamic movement in Gaza, and parts of
the West Bank.
The moment Islamic groups were rebranded as
Hamas, the new movement immediately mobilized all of its constituency,
its mosques, community and youth centers and large social networks to
echo the call of the Intifada, defining it largely as an ‘Islamic
awaking’.
Hamas extended its influence to reach the West Bank
through its student movements in West Bank universities, among other
outlets.
The signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, but especially
the failure
of the accords and the so-called 'peace process' to meet the minimum
expectations of the Palestinian people, gave Hamas another impetus.
Since the period of 'peace' saw the expansion
of illegal Jewish settlements, the doubling of the number of illegal
settlers and the loss of more Palestinian land, Hamas’ popularity
continued to rise.
Meanwhile, the PLO was sidelined to make room
for the Palestinian Authority (PA).
Established in 1994, the PA
was a direct outcome of Oslo. Its leaders were not leaders of the
Intifada, but mostly wealthy Fatah returnees, who were once based in
Tunis and other Arab capitals.
It was only a matter of months
before the PA turned against Palestinians, and Hamas activists, in
particular.
The late Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat,
understood well the need to maintain a semblance of balance in his
treatment of Palestinian opposition forces. Although he was under
tremendous Israel-US pressure to crack down on the 'infrastructure of
terrorism', he understood that cracking harshly on Hamas and others
could hasten his party's eroding popularity.
A year or so after
his passing, local Palestinian elections - in which Hamas participated
for the first time - changed the political power dynamics in Palestine
for the first time in decades. Hamas won the majority of seats in the
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC).
Hamas' election victory
in 2006 prompted a western boycott, massive Israeli crackdown on the
movement and clashes between Hamas and Fatah. Ultimately, Gaza was
placed under siege, and several Israeli wars killed thousands of
Palestinians.
During the last ten years Hamas has been forced to
seek alternatives. It was forced out of the trenches to govern and
economically manage one of the most impoverished regions on earth.
The siege became the status quo. Attempts by some European powers to talk
to Hamas were always met by strong Israeli-American-PA rejection.
Hamas' old Charter was often used to silence voices that called for
ending Hamas' isolation, along with the Gaza siege. Taken out of
its historical context (a popular uprising), Hamas' Charter read like an
archaic treatise, devoid of any political wisdom.
On May 1,
Hamas introduced a new Charter, entitled: "A
Document of General Principles and Policies."
The new
Charter makes no reference to the Muslim Brotherhood. Instead, it
realigns Hamas' political outlook to fit somewhere between national and
Islamic sentiments.
It consents to the idea of
establishing a Palestinian state
per the June 1967 border, although insists on the
Palestinian people's legal and moral claim to all of historic Palestine.
It rejects the Oslo agreements, but speaks of the Palestinian
Authority as a fact of life; it supports all forms of resistance, but
insists on armed resistance as a right of any occupied nation.
Expectedly, it does
not recognize Israel.
Hamas' new Charter seems like a
scrupulously cautious attempt at finding political balances within
extremely tight political margins.
The outcome is a document
that is - although it can be understood in the region's new political
context - a frenzied departure from the past.
Hamas of 1988 may
have seemed unrefined and lacking savvy, but its creation was a direct
expression of a real, existing sentiment of many Palestinians.
Hamas of 2017 is much more stately and careful in both words and
actions, yet it is adrift in new space that is governed by Arab money,
regional and international politics and the pressure of ten
years under siege and war.
Indeed, the future
of the movement, and its brand of politics and resistance will be
determined by the outcome of this dialectics.
- Dr. Ramzy Baroud
has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second Palestinian Intifada” and his
latest “My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. His
website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
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