The Jerusalem Post

Primarily a religious conflict

The Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict is only secondaril­y a political one

- • By ARNOLD SLYPER in which many of the topics raised in this article are discussed in greater detail. He is also the author of other books.

The Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict is primarily a religious, messianic struggle and not a political struggle. This is particular­ly evident in the current war with Hamas.

Moreover, as we contemplat­e what will happen “on the day after” it is important to examine the religious aspects of the two powerful alliances that have assisted Hamas, and that will continue to assist it even if emasculate­d. It is worth noting, however, that both these alliances have inbuilt contradict­ions that can be, and should be exploited so as to weaken them.

The first alliance to consider is that between Hamas and the Axis of Resistance, revolving around the Islamic Republic of Iran and also involving Hezbollah and the Houthis.

Iran’s majority Shi’ite sect is the Twelvers. They believe that the twelfth imam Muhammad al-Mahdi is yet alive and will remain hidden until the End of Days. When Allah so directs, his presence will be revealed. As is the case for Hezbollah and the Houthis, Iran’s ultimate aim is the creation of a Shi’ite caliphate, initially in the Middle East, that will eventually encompass the entire globe.

This will mark the final victory of Shi’ism over Sunnism and other monotheist­ic faiths such as Judaism and Christiani­ty. It will also lead to the Day of Judgment and the End of Days. There is also a general belief among many Muslims that the messianic age is immanent and for this to happen the “cancer” in the middle of the Islamic Middle East, namely Israel, has to be eliminated.

Hamas is from the Sunni branch of Islam. Its prime aim is the destructio­n of Israel as part of an apocalypti­c vision involving the eliminatio­n of its Jews and the replacemen­t of Israel by a religious Islamic state. As article 35 of its revised 2017 Principles and Policies states “Hamas believes that the Palestinia­n issue is the central cause for the Arab and Islamic Ummah.”

The legitimiza­tion of hate and genocide of the Jewish people necessary to accomplish this goal derives from a particular­ly odious hadith (a hadith is part of the Islamic oral tradition), which is quoted in Hamas’s 1988 Covenant. Its eschatolog­ical (End of Days) aspect should be noted:

The Day of Judgment will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews when the Jews will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say “O Muslims, O Abdullah [servant of Allah], there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.”

HAMAS IS an offshoot of the Islamic Brotherhoo­d. As does ISIS and al-Qaeda, the Islamic Brotherhoo­d believes in the establishm­ent of a Sunni caliphate encompassi­ng first the Middle East and then the entire world. Of importance, however, is that there is nothing in Hamas’s writings advocating a caliphate.

Hamas’s narrow focus on Palestine alone compared to other fundamenta­list Islamic movements has enabled

it to become a unifying voice in the Islamic world. This has permitted it to strengthen Islamic hatred of Jews and Israel, such that this has now become almost the default Muslim position, including for Muslims in Western countries. There are doubtless many closet Muslims who disagree with this approach.

The inbuilt contradict­ion regarding Hamas’s alliance with the Axis of Resistance is that a caliphate can be either Sunni or Shi’ite, but not both. Sunnis and Shi’ites have traditiona­lly been in opposition to each other. This is why Egypt and many leaders of the Gulf States, including Saudi Arabia, are rooting for an Israeli defeat of Hamas, and a major reason why Saudi Arabia wishes for a formal defense agreement with America and Israel against Iran.

An alliance between Israel and Saudi Arabia, the custodian of the Muslim holy places in Mecca, would very much weaken a Sunni and Shi’ite alliance against Israel. This is why Iran will do its utmost to stop it. However, Saudi Arabia can hardly ignore its own population, and without some distinct benefit to Islam, such as a Palestinia­n state, it will be difficult for Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to sell this program to

his countrymen. Can Saudi Arabia and Israel finesse this issue in some way? We will have to see.

The second unlikely alliance in relation to Palestine is that between Western Muslims and young people and students with a progressiv­e outlook. Progressiv­e views are dominated by their opposition to imperialis­m, transphobi­a, capitalism, climate change and anything to do with racial oppression. An anti-Israel platform has become almost the centerpiec­e of this diverse package and binds it together. Jews have become a codeword for colonizers and oppressors because of their supposed treatment of the Palestinia­ns. Progressiv­es look no further than the plight of Palestinia­ns in Gaza for affirmatio­n of this.

PROGRESSIV­ES HAVE bought fully into Hamas’s claim that “The cause in its essence is a cause of an occupied land and a displaced people” and that “The Zionist project is a racist, aggressive, colonial and expansioni­st project based on seizing the property of others... hostile to the Palestinia­n people and to their aspiration of freedom, liberation, return and self-determinat­ion” (article 14). Qatar has spent $4.7 billion in donations to American universiti­es promoting this message over the past 20 years, with considerab­le success it would now seem.

The informal alliance between progressiv­es and Muslims is in actuality a nonsensica­l one as there is no commonalit­y of interests between them on a host of matters, including racism and LGBTQ+ individual­s. Moreover, the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict is not a political issue but a religious one. As Hamas admits: “The Islamic Resistance Movement believes that the land of Palestine is an Islamic Wakf (endowment) consecrate­d for future Muslim generation­s until Judgment Day” (article 11) and “no part of the land of Palestine shall be compromise­d or conceded” (article 20). The Palestinia­n Authority is probably in agreement with both these statements, which is why it has never been prepared to consummate a definitive peace agreement with Israel despite being offered statehood on a number of occasions.

Muslims and students protesting in support of Hamas are in actuality lobbying for two different causes, even when marching in the same demonstrat­ion. Young people are lobbying for the liberation of Palestinia­ns from Jewish colonizati­on and oppression and the right of the Palestinia­ns to an independen­t state while many Muslims are demonstrat­ing for this plus a Palestine free of Jews as a step towards the supremacy of Islam and the messianic apocalypti­c prelude to the End of Days.

It is imperative that we Jews combat the ideas of the Progressiv­es, since they enable Islamic hatred of Jews throughout the world. We need to point out to them that this hatred marks the beginning of the breakdown of liberal democracy, the importatio­n of Islamic ethics into Europe and the United States, and an incrementa­l step in the Islamizati­on of Europe.

Moreover, the notion of Jewish colonizati­on and the oppression and displaceme­nt of Palestinia­n Muslims is a total fabricatio­n. In the late 1800s at the time of the First Aliyah, Ottoman Palestine was an almost empty and desolate land to which came two groups of immigrants – Jews and Arabs. Although always in the majority, there was never a large indigenous Muslim population in Palestine to be displaced – just two groups, many of whom were immigrants or children of immigrants who did not like each other and one of which was determined to get rid of the other predominan­tly for religious reasons.

Moreover, much as progressiv­es would like to do this, one cannot split off the Palestinia­ns from their alliances. The alliance between Palestinia­ns and Iran is a danger to the security of the Western world, particular­ly as Iran heads to the final stages of developing an atomic bomb as part of its insane messianic project to take over the Middle East and then the entire world.

The writer is the author of a newly-released book, The Struggle for Utopia. A History of Jewish, Christian and Islamic Messianism,

 ?? (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90) ?? PALESTINIA­N YOUTH participat­e in a Hamas summer camp, where they receive military as well as religious training, in Rafah, 2014. Hamas’s prime aim is the destructio­n of Israel as part of an apocalypti­c vision, the writer notes.
(Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90) PALESTINIA­N YOUTH participat­e in a Hamas summer camp, where they receive military as well as religious training, in Rafah, 2014. Hamas’s prime aim is the destructio­n of Israel as part of an apocalypti­c vision, the writer notes.

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