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           |  | Understanding Hamas at 25:
 Beyond the Tired 
	Language of the Zionist-Dominated Western Media
 
 By Ramzy 
	Baroud
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 17, 2012
 
  “In a moment of high theatre he dropped to his knees, placed his 
	lips on the ground and kissed the land he has commanded by proxy”. This is 
	how Robert Tait of the British Telegraph worded the moment Khalid Misha'al 
	arrived in Gaza on Dec 07. Tait’s report on what many in Gaza and elsewhere 
	consider a watershed event in the history of the Islamic movement, was 
	mostly consistent with (the Zionist-dominated Western) mainstream reporting 
	on any event concerning the impoverished and besieged Gaza Strip: often 
	biased, selective and devoid of real understanding or empathy.
 
 Media 
	reporting on Hamas is doubly provocative, controversial and similar to 
	political stances towards Hamas. However, in the eyes of Israel, through the 
	prism of its media and among Israel’s western supporters, Hamas is an 
	unequaled terrorist organization, sworn to destroy Israel and unlike the 
	other ‘moderate’ Palestinians – for example, western-backed Palestinian 
	Authority – it refuses to recognize Israel’s ‘right to exist’. The latter 
	point was faithfully emphasized by Tait. He, like many others, unthinkingly 
	or deliberately fails to question the incredulous condition placed on a 
	relatively small movement as it faces a powerful and habitually brutal 
	Israeli military occupation.
 
 Hamas’ supporters, on the other hand, 
	see the 25-year-old movement as the pinnacle of Palestinian resistance; an 
	iconic organization that unlike leading secular Palestinian factions, 
	refuses to compromise. To make the point, they cite various battles and 
	numerous assassinations of Hamas’ leaders, including that of quadriplegic 
	Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, who was pitilessly murdered by an Israeli missile in 
	2004. They argue that a movement which is willing to pay this kind of a 
	price – life itself - for its political and moral stances must be above 
	suspicion, if not criticism.
 
 However, for many in the left that is 
	barely enough. The notion that the movement was an outright creation of the 
	Israeli internal intelligence Shin Bet, has been stable in leftist discourse 
	for many years. The idea is often accepted without any serious attempts at 
	qualification or discussion, like many leftist ideals on Palestine and 
	Israel.
 
 Each party does its utmost to defend their anti and 
	pro Hamas arguments.
 
 Pro-Israeli media is anchored in the suicide 
	bombings line of reasoning, which, again, is selective, lacks context and 
	conveniently overlooks the fact that thousands of Palestinians were killed 
	by the Israeli military, even years after Hamas abandoned such tactics.
 
 Hamas supporters reference battles, notwithstanding the Nov 14, 8-day war on 
	Gaza, where Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other resistance groups, earned what 
	they perceive as an unprecedented victory against Israel.
 
 There are 
	also those who, while sympathizing with Palestinian aspirations and 
	resistance, have a difficult time accepting Hamas’ turnabout regarding 
	Syria, its suspicious closeness to Qatar, and what they see as shifty and 
	dubious political style.
 
 Peculiarly, there is a common denominator 
	between all of these perceptions of Hamas. They all brand the movement using 
	single, uniform logic, devoid of any accommodating analysis that examines 
	facts, overt and subtle discourses, and places such intricate phenomena in 
	larger political contexts. Such a unitary view is of course not unique to 
	Hamas, but it also applies to everything Palestinian. It is a natural 
	outcome of media distortions and political bias. Anyone Israel perceives as 
	an enemy, is instantly dehumanized and presented with crude and inane 
	language. Social media helps correct the imbalance to a degree, although it 
	also contributes to the polarization: a Palestinian thus becomes either a 
	cold-blooded terrorist or a would-be martyr, bad or good, pro-US or 
	pro-Iran, and so on.
 
 However, an unpretentious analysis requires 
	breaking away from all the fixed ideas and preemptive conclusions, where 
	Hamas is neither a violence-driven menace nor a flawless organization with a 
	perfect track record; neither a brainchild of Israeli intelligence, nor a 
	political conduit of Qatar.
 
 Some of those who reported on Meshaal’s 
	visit to Gaza, emphasized the militant or religious symbols that awaited him 
	upon arrival. He was “greeted by a throng of hundreds of chanting supporters 
	– some armed to the teeth with Kalishnikovs and rocket propelled grenades,” 
	wrote Tait right in the first paragraph. Others highlighted his ‘wish’ to 
	one day die a ‘martyr’ in Gaza (AFP). Once again, such reporting confounds 
	terms with deep cultural references – as in his willingness to pay the 
	ultimate price for his beliefs. Interestingly, Meshaal was in fact all but 
	dead in an Israeli assassination attempt at his life in Amman, Jordan in 
	1997, another fact conveniently omitted from many reports.
 
 Since its 
	inception, Hamas has grown in every pertinent way. Its very first statement 
	was a true depiction of the inexperience of the movement at the time and the 
	nature of the relationship that governed ill-fated Palestinians and the rest 
	of the Arab world: “It’s our duty to address the word to the Arab rulers, 
	and particularly to the rulers of Egypt, the Egyptian army and the Egyptian 
	people, as follows: What has happened to you, O rulers of Egypt? Were you 
	asleep in the period of the treaty of shame and surrender, the Camp David 
	treaty?”
 
 Since then, the political landscape has been repeatedly 
	altered. While Hamas’ own evolution had itself impacted some of the change – 
	for example, its decision to participate in the legislative elections in 
	2006, its conflict with Fatah, and its handling of the situation in Gaza 
	since then – much of the transformation, especially in the last two years 
	has not been of its own making.
 
 As violence flared in Syria, Hamas 
	attempted to develop a unique neutral position which failed. The political 
	schisms in Syria proved impossible to navigate and the June 2012 
	assassination of Kamal Ghanaja, a Hamas mid-level leader in Damascus was the 
	bloody culmination of that failure.
 
 Fearing that Hamas’ anxiety 
	would lead to further closeness to Iran – especially as the political score 
	in tumultuous Egypt is yet to be settled - a major campaign, led by Qatar 
	was initiated to sway Hamas from Iran, which was a major source of support 
	to Hamas and other Palestinian factions. The push to influence Hamas was 
	topped by a late October visit to Gaza by Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, 
	emir of Qatar. It was then that Hamas' Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh 
	declared that the siege was over, only to be reminded three weeks later by a 
	massive Israeli war that it was not. However, deterring Hamas backfired and 
	Israel soundly lost that battle. In the process there were new discoveries 
	that the resistance in Gaza was much more resourceful than previously 
	thought.
 
 Days after Gazans celebrated the defeat of Israel’s war 
	objectives, several billboards thanking Iran for its help of the resistance 
	were erected in Gaza. It was perhaps Hamas’ (and the Islamic Jihad) way of 
	sending a clear message that it will continue to play by its own rules, that 
	it is a member of no camp, that its allegiance remains to principles and not 
	to governments or funds. Interestingly though, the billboards were not 
	signed.
 
 Now that Meshaal has visited Gaza and was greeted by a large 
	number of Palestinians, the movement seems to operate with greater clarity 
	and confidence than any other time in the last two years. “Politics without 
	resistance has no meaning,” he said soon after arrival. The statement is 
	rife with meanings and suggestions.
 
 At 25, Hamas has morphed in its 
	status and importance, and within that prominence lays its strengths and 
	weaknesses. In order to maintain a level of power and to safeguard its 
	political evolution, it has no other option but to become even more 
	dependent on other parties, Egypt notwithstanding, whose prospects for 
	stability are receding by the day.
 
 The Israeli prescription of 
	understanding everything Palestinian, including Hamas, no longer suffices. 
	Western journalists need to take notice of that complex reality and quit 
	stereotyping and cataloging Palestinians using the same old language. There 
	is more to understanding such issues than a tired division between good guys 
	and others “hell-bent on the destruction of Israel.” Hamas should be 
	understood properly within its local context, and then in relations to all 
	of its surroundings, including Israel.
 
 25-years later, Hamas is 
	still understood within limited confines of an ever-redundant discourse 
	obsessed with Israel’s security, and later with an imagined Iranian threat. 
	A new understanding is desperately required, one that is sensible enough to 
	take into account the uniqueness of the Palestinian narrative itself, 
	Palestinian history, the struggle and rights, as opposed to Israel’s 
	security - the cornerstone of western media reporting on Palestine and the 
	Middle East.
 
 – 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).
 
 
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