The Arab defeat of June 1967 marked the start of an "awakening" of the Islamist trend. After
Founding
The Muslim Brotherhood started to play a more noticeable role in politics, especially on Palestinian university campuses, in the early eighties. Its activities were focused primarily on opposing the secular agenda of the PLO. At the same time, it believed that it was "still in the preparatory stage of grooming a generation of Islamists that would lead the transformation of the society into an Islamic one, as the first step towards the declaration of jihad [holy war]." These positions taken by the Muslim Brotherhood leadership contributed to a split within its ranks and encouraged the formation of the
When the popular uprising later known as the
From the Gaza Strip, Hamas expanded its activity to the West Bank in January 1988. The movement participated in strike actions and street clashes with the occupation. It began to emerge as a parallel and competing organization to the PLO through its independent activities and to conduct armed actions against Israeli targets through its military wing, which was initially called the Palestinian Mujahideen and led by
Concerning the organizational structure of Hamas, the movement practices shura (“consultation” in Muslim tradition) within its organizational and institutional structures, which hold regular elections in all its sectors every four years to choose the movement’s leaders. The General
Political Orientations of Hamas
On 18 August 1988, Hamas issued its charter, which outlined the movement’s ideological bases and objectives, reaffirming that Hamas was “an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine” and that it “embraced Islam as a way of life.” The movement considered Palestine to be a waqf, or religious endowment "that was the inalienable property of the generations of Muslims to come until Judgment Day [….] to relinquish any part of it would be wrong,” and that the liberation of Palestine was a fard, or religious obligation “that every Muslim wherever he may be is enjoined with." In describing “the enemy camp," Hamas’s charter did not distinguish "Zionists" from "Jews." Instead, it focused on the latter, considering them as "having amassed enormous, influential material wealth, which they have employed to realize their dream." Its charter indicated that it had “mutual respect” for the [secular] nationalist movements in Palestinian politics, that “its hands were joined to theirs, so long as they do not give allegiance to the Communist East or the Crusader West," and that it saw the PLO as "the closest of allies to the Islamic Resistance Movement"; however, it also insisted that the idea of the secular nation-state adopted by the PLO was "in complete contradiction with the religious concept."
The PLO leadership initially tried to contain Hamas by accommodating it, offering it membership in the
The Armed Activity of Hamas
Hamas launched its military operations under the name Palestinian Mujahideen in the spring of 1988. This prompted the Israelis to launch a massive crackdown on the movement and its military apparatus in May 1989, during which it arrested Shaykh Ahmad Yasin along with many leaders and cadres. An Israeli military court sentenced Yasin to life imprisonment plus an additional fifteen years. He was released on 1 October 1997 in a prisoner exchange between
In December 1992, Hamas fighters from what was renamed as Izzeddin al-Qassam Brigades carried out an operation where they captured and killed an Israeli soldier, Naseem Toledano
. The Israelis responded to this with a fresh series of arrests within the movement. They also deported 415 activists from Hamas and the Islamic Jihad Movement to
Hamas and the Palestinian National Authority
Hamas continued its military activities even after the establishment of the
When the
Taking Control of the Gaza Strip
Hamas’s change in strategy to gradually integrate itself into the Palestinian political system became apparent in 2004, when it participated in local elections that
In the legislative elections, held in January 2006, Hamas won a majority of the seats in the legislative assembly, which led to a polarization of the Palestinian political arena into two camps. Following the departure of the last Israeli soldier from the Gaza Strip on 12 September 2005, this polarization became more extreme and was reflected in a growing state of lawlessness and lack of security, with recurring armed clashes between Palestinian policemen and Hamas fighters. These clashes eventually escalated into all-out conflict, and in mid-June 2007 resulted in Hamas taking complete control of Gaza by military force, which led to a political and administrative split between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Hamas as Ruling Party
After Hamas assumed control of the Gaza Strip, several attempts have been made since late February 2009 to end the internal Palestinian split, all of which have failed until mid-2022. Since the Hamas takeover, Israel imposed a suffocating siege on the Gaza Strip, which has caused the living conditions of its residents to considerably deteriorate. Israel also launched four major wars on Gaza between late 2008 and the spring of 2021 that resulted in the death of thousands of Palestinian civilians and tens of thousands of wounded and handicapped; thousands of houses, workshops, and factories were also destroyed. After taking over the Gaza Strip, Hamas put a halt to bomb attacks, or "martyrdom operations.” But when Israel launched its massive attacks, Hamas began to launch rockets that had been either smuggled through tunnels into Gaza or manufactured locally. The latter were progressively improved and grew in number, as the May 2021 confrontation demonstrated.
Hamas’s New Charter and New Leadership
On the evening of 1 May 2017, Khalid Mishal, the Hamas politburo chief at the time, announced from
Hamas issued this charter as a kind of stepping-stone toward gaining recognition at a global level. However, its new political discourse did not noticeably affect its standing on the international stage.
On 6 May 2017, Hamas announced the result of its internal elections, held across the Gaza Strip, West Bank, inside Israeli prisons, and outside Palestine: forty-five members were elected to the General Shura Council, who in turn elected nineteen members to the politburo for a four-year term;
Hamas's Foreign Relations
Since the early 1990s,
On the other hand, Hamas’s relations with Egypt have greatly developed during the reign of President
Abu-Amr, Ziad. “Hamas: A Historical and Political Background.” Journal of Palestine Studies 22, no.4 (Spring 1993): 5–19
Baconi, Tareq. Hamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2018.
Chehab, Zaki. Inside Hamas: The Untold Story of the Militants, Martyrs and Spies. London: I. B. Tauris, 2007.
Dunning, Tristan. Hamas, Jihad and Popular Legitimacy: Reinterpreting Resistance in Palestine. New York, NY: Routledge, 2016.
Filiu, Jean-Pierre. “The Origins of Hamas: Militant Legacy or Israeli Tool?” Journal of Palestine Studies 41, no.3 (Spring 2012): 54-70.
Hroub, Khaled. Hamas: Political Thought and Practice. Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies, 2000.
Hroub, Khaled. “A Newer Hamas: The Revised Charter”. Journal of Palestine studies 46, no.4 (Summer 2017): 100-111.
Løvlie, Frode. “Questioning the Secular-Religious Cleavage in Palestinian Politics: Comparing Fatah and Hamas”. Politics and Religion 7 (2014): 100–121.
Mishal, Khalid. “The Making of a Palestinian Islamist Leader: An Interview with Khalid Mishal (Part I)”. Journal of Palestine Studies 37, no.3 (Spring 2008): 59-73.
Mishal, Khalid. “A Hamas Perspective on the Movement's Evolving Role: An Interview with Khalid Mishal (Part II)”. Journal of Palestine Studies 37, no.4 (Summer 2008): 59-81.
Roy, Sara. Hamas and Civil Society in Gaza: Engaging the Islamist Social Sector. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011.
Saleh, Mohsen Mohammad, ed. Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas. Beirut: Al-Zaytouna Centre for Studies & Consultations, 2017.
Tamimi, Azzam. Hamas: A History from Within. Northampton, MA: Olive Branch Press, 2007.
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