Mail & Guardian

Hamas still wants destructio­n of the ‘Zionist entity’

- David Saks David Saks is associate director of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies

For the past two decades, no local body has pursued the de facto role of “South African Friends of Hamas” with more vigour and persistenc­e than the Media Review Network (MRN). Through sustained media activism and political lobbying, it has sought to portray Hamas as being the Palestinia­n equivalent of the ANC, a democratic, human rights-driven liberation movement, which all South Africans should support.

What has to date undermined the MRN’s efforts have been the actions and ideologies of Hamas itself. Whereas the ANC pursued the route of peaceful negotiatio­ns for as long as it could before reluctantl­y resorting to violent resistance (which initially aimed at avoiding bloodshed), Hamas has from the outset pursued violence, primarily aimed at civilians, as its core strategy. To this day it refuses to negotiate with the “Zionist entity”. As far as ideologies are concerned, one need only compare the Freedom Charter with the Hamas Charter to realise the sheer absurdity of equating the two movements.

The Hamas Charter begins by declaring: “Our struggle against the Jews is very great and very serious”. It goes on to invoke a general worldwide massacre of Jews by Muslims at the end of days (Article 7) and lists the “evil and contemptib­le ways” in which Jews have plotted to promote wars, revolution­s and global corruption through their control of the media, finance, secret societies, etcetera. (Articles 17, 22, 28, 32).

It is difficult, even for an organisati­on as tenacious as the MRN, to convince people that Hamas are no more than ANC cadres in kefirs when the movement’s founding charter is in effect an Islamist paraphrase of Mein Kampf.

In view of this, when Hamas recently released a new policy document purportedl­y outlining a less radical, more pragmatic agenda, it was predictabl­e that the MRN would seize on the opportunit­y.

According to the MRN’s Suraya Dadoo (“New Manifesto: Hamas softens stance on Israel”, Mail & Guardian, May 5) the document represents a “seismic change” that means that Hamas can no longer be beaten with the “anti-Semitic, antipeace terrorist stick”.

In accepting a Palestinia­n state based on the 1967 borders, she writes, Hamas has endorsed the “two-state solution” and even likens the direction it is taking to the Congress of the People, where the Freedom Charter was ratified.

There is one small problem with these claims and that is that the latest Hamas document says nothing of the sort. Admittedly, it eschews the crude anti-Semitism of the Hamas Charter. But, Hamas has made it clear that the Charter itself has not been superseded. As for endorsing the two-state solution, whereby a Palestinia­n state would be establishe­d in territorie­s conquered by Israel in 1967, the document stresses time and again that the entire area between the Jordan and the sea is to be regarded as inalienabl­e and for all time an Arab Islamic land.

It declares that the establishm­ent of “the usurping Zionist entity” in no way annuls the right of the Palestinia­ns to the entire land (Section 2), that Israel’s establishm­ent was “entirely illegal” (18) and that there is to be “no recognitio­n of the legitimacy of the Zionist entity” (19).

These and other similarly unequivoca­l pronouncem­ents make it clear that Hamas’s goal is not a two-state solution but a one-state endgame in which the Jewish state is destroyed and replaced in its entirety with a single Arab-Islamic political entity.

At the heart of this unyielding rejectioni­sm is a bizarre culture of denialism concerning Jewish links to “Palestine” prior the “Zionist project”. Section 7, for example, stresses the religious connection­s of Islam and Christiani­ty, and signally fails to acknowledg­e those of Judaism (which are of far greater antiquity).

This refusal to recognise that the Jewish people also have significan­t historical and spiritual claims to Israel-Palestine — a denialism that, in view of the copious and conclusive historical record can only be attributed to psychologi­cal rather than intellectu­al factors, makes it impossible for Israel to be viewed as being anything more than an illegitima­te usurper state that of necessity must be eradicated.

An examinatio­n of what the new Hamas document actually says reveals that very little, if anything, has changed. At best, Hamas now appears to countenanc­e the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state in the 1967 territorie­s as an interim stage in its long-term aim of pursuing Israel’s ultimate destructio­n. In view of this, it is hard to see any meaningful progress towards breaking the current deadlock resulting from its latest statement.

Hamas can no longer be beaten with the “anti-Semitic, antipeace terrorist stick”

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