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 Hamas and the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood: 
	 Reanimating History  By Ramzy Baroud  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 9, 2012 
 There was an unmistakable hint of triumph in the comments made 
	by Ismail Haniyah, Prime Minister of the elected Hamas government in Gaza 
	when he was hosted by Mohammed Badie, Supreme Guide of Egypt’s Muslim 
	Brotherhood.
 
 Both leaders said what would be expected of them under 
	these circumstances. Haniyeh asserted that his movement’s “presence with the 
	Brotherhood threatens the Israeli entity,” and Badie reaffirmed the 
	Brotherhood’s commitment to “issues of liberation, foremost the Palestinian 
	issue” (MENA and AP, December 26).
 
 It is very telling that 
	Haniyeh’s first official visit outside Gaza as prime minister was to Egypt’s 
	Muslim Brotherhood headquarters in Cairo's Moqattam district. He shared his 
	message - of resistance against Israeli occupation, national unity with 
	rival Fatah and reaching out to Muslim countries – and then resumed his 
	regional tour.
 
 Since 2006, Hamas has attempted, but largely failed 
	to win the approval of governments in Muslim-majority countries. Muslim 
	solidarity was the thrust of Hamas’ foreign policy, aimed at lessening 
	Palestinian political and financial dependence on the US and other Western 
	governments. It failed because, as it turned out, US financial and political 
	leverage is too overpowering and far-reaching for a relatively small 
	movement like Hamas to singlehandedly challenge. But, as Haniyeh himself 
	reiterated, times are changing
 
 In the first and second rounds of 
	Egyptian elections, the Brotherhood’s newly created Freedom and Justice 
	party won more than 35 percent of the vote. The electoral success was hardly 
	an anomaly. The Islamic Nahda party, which formed the first 
	post-revolutionary government in Tunisia, won more than 40 percent of the 
	vote last October. Morocco’s Justice and Development party won the November 
	elections and the Islamic leaning of Libya’s new political set up is all too 
	palpable. There have been marks of Islamic political influence in other 
	countries across the region.
 
 The reformation of the political 
	landscape in the Arab region has tempted many to infer polarizing, if not 
	frightening conclusions. Israeli army Home Front Command Chief Major General 
	Eyal Eisenberg was one of the first in Israel to refer to these developments 
	as an Arab Spring turning into a “radical Islamic winter”. He said, “This 
	leads us to the conclusion that through a long-term process, the likelihood 
	of an all-out war is increasingly growing” (Arutz Sheva, September 5).
 
 However, what truly worries Israel is not the radicalization of Muslim 
	societies, but the rise of Islamic politics to represent a rational, 
	mainstream political discourse. It threatens Israel because it could rally 
	many Arabs around one cohesive political agenda, and repositions Palestine, 
	once more, as central to what many Muslim intellectuals refer to as the 
	“Islamic Awakening”.
 
 Israeli fear mongering aside, the US – Israel’s 
	main benefactor - must find ways to co-exist with the new political 
	arrangement. Other Western governments too “will have to adapt to a power 
	shift they have long sought to prevent,” wrote Roula Khalaf and Heba Saleh 
	in the Financial Times (December 28).
 
 For Israel, however, the 
	transformation in regional politics will prove unbearable. It is not 
	Tunisia’s Nahda party that Israel is most concerned about, of course; it is 
	Hamas. This is partly what compelled Haniyeh to venture out of Gaza. As the 
	US is hoping to control, if not manage, the rise of Islamic parties, Hamas 
	aims at ensuring a primary position for Palestine - as seen through the 
	prism of the Islamic movement – in the region’s new political landscape.
 
 There is little doubt that Hamas’ rise to political prominence in 2006, 
	and the numerous subsequent attempts at isolating and destroying it will 
	influence new Islamic parties in various Arab countries. Hamas’ ability to 
	survive has certainly registered among new Muslim politicians in Egypt and 
	elsewhere. Now, with the early fruits of the Egyptian revolution being 
	plucked by Islamic parties, Hamas is guardedly making its move. Hamas is a “jihadi 
	movement of the Brotherhood with a Palestinian face,” said Haniyeh in Cairo.
 
 A quick look at the roots of the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine 
	shows that Haniyeh was hardly exaggerating. Since the Society of the Muslim 
	Brotherhood was founded in Ismailiyya, Egypt in 1928 by Hasan al-Banna and a 
	few others, it quickly found in Palestine a rally cry to unite Muslims 
	through the entire region. The first link between the movement and Palestine 
	was formed in 1935, when Abd al-Rahman al-Banna (the founder’s brother) 
	visited Palestine and met with the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini.
 
 The Brotherhood became visible during the revolt of 1936, as they 
	communicated the Palestinian message with an Islamic tone to the rest of the 
	Arab world. The cause of Palestine promptly became the central mission and 
	calling of the Brotherhood, as Hasan al-Banna himself headed the newly 
	founded General Central Committee to Aid Palestine.
 
 More, in April 
	1948, when most Arab governments delayed in partaking in the defense of 
	Palestine, the Muslim Brotherhood deployed three battalions of volunteers. 
	Estimates of the number of Brotherhood volunteers in Palestine during the 
	war and the subsequent Nakba vary, but Hasan al-Banna himself noted, in 
	March 1948, that the movement had approximately 1,500 volunteers in 
	Palestine.
 
 The relationship between the Brotherhood and Palestine 
	had it ebbs and flows, but the rapport was never completely severed. Even 
	before Hamas was officially established 1987, the movement functioned under 
	various classifications, all directly affiliated with Egypt’s Brotherhood.
 
 The recent Cairo meeting between Haniyeh and Badie could be 
	understood within that historical context, representing a triumphant reunion 
	and possibly open coordination. This would once again rejuvenate the 
	Brotherhood’s Palestine connection, and grant Hamas greater political 
	leverage - after years of isolation, and despite the current political 
	turmoil in the region.
 
 Of course, Hamas’ challenges are many and 
	growing. Leading among them is Israel’s violent escalation in Gaza, and the 
	unremitting US pressure. Still, it is expected that Hamas’ political message 
	and outlook will continue to find balance between Palestinian exceptionality 
	and the more inclusive Arab and Islamic framework.
 
 By venturing out 
	of Gaza, Haniyeh is hoping to expand the diameters of the Palestinian 
	Islamic movement into Egypt and beyond – thus reclaiming what Hamas once 
	considered ‘the strategic depth’ of the Palestinian cause. While such a push 
	failed to attain its objectives in 2006, 2012 is a brand new year.
 
 - 
	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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