Hamas

A Q&A Primer on Hamas – Part 3: Who Supports Hamas?

1 November 2023

6.8 MINS

We will first consider the concept of victimhood, and the special place it occupies in Islamic thought. Then, we will consider the people and states that support Hamas.

Many pro-Palestinian protestors were upset that Western government leaders have offered condolences for the Israelis killed by Hamas on October 7, and endorsed Israelis’ right to defend themselves. What was that about? Why is victimhood such a touchy issue?

After the attacks on October 7, it was only understandable that many Western politicians spoke out in support of the Jewish victims, and defended the Israelis’ right to defend themselves. However, very many Muslim leaders immediately complained about these expressions of sympathy for raped, tortured, captured and murdered Israelis. Essentially, their complaint was that similar sympathy and endorsement for self-defence was not being expressed at the time for Palestinians.

What was most striking about how all this unfolded was that Muslim spokespeople, who have often lamented Palestinian suffering without acknowledgement of Jewish victims, were offended when politicians focused, for that moment, on Jewish victims.

For example, the Australian National Imams Council issued a statement on October 8, which told the Australian government to “avoid one-sided statements of support which ignore the Palestinian people.” They issued this statement on the same day that their public relations director, Sheikh Ibrahim Dadoun, gave a fiery street address in which he was shouting with joy over Hamas’ attacks on October 7,

“I’m smiling and I’m happy. I’m elated. It’s a day of courage. It’s a day of happiness. It’s a day of pride. It’s a day of victory! This is the day we’ve been waiting for!”

How can (some) Muslims be so one-sided, yet call out politicians for being one-sided?

From these recent reactions, it is clear that it can be offensive, and even deeply hurtful to Muslims, to draw attention to the victimhood of others. Why is that so? Why this widespread, competitive victimhood?

Muslim victimhood is a theme deeply embedded in Islam’s origins. Those who are not familiar with the foundational texts of Islam may not be aware of how deeply a sense of Muslim victimhood runs through these texts, and how Muslim victimhood trumps all other victimhood. Here are two historical events which illustrate the point.

In 1927, the English Muslim convert Marmaduke Pickthall gave an influential lecture with the title Tolerance in Islam. In it he alleged, in an allusion to the genocide of the Armenians, that “… before every massacre of Christians by Muslims of which you read, there was a more wholesale massacre or attempted massacre of Muslims by Christians.”

More recently, in 2005, Wafa Sultan was debating Professor Ahmad bin Muhammad – an Algerian Professor of Religious Politics – on Al-Jazeera TV, when she pointed out how some have suffered at the hands of Muslims. Suddenly, Ahmad bin Muhammad flew into a rage and began to shout,

“We are the victims! … There are millions of innocent people among us [Muslims], while the innocent among you [non-Muslims] … number only dozens, hundreds, or thousands, at the most.”

This insistent demand that “We are the victims!” is projected from Islam’s origin story and the rationale it gives for the nascent Muslim community’s turn to violence. Islamic tradition relates that Muslims were being persecuted in Mecca until they migrated to Medina, where an Islamic state was founded, which then used force to defend and advance Islam. The turn to violence is justified on the basis of the previous persecution of Muslims. (For my alternative explanation of the Meccan-Medinan transition in the Qur’an, see here.)

Commenting on this transition from victims to victors, the Qur’an twice declares that fitna (‘persecution’, ‘oppression’) is worse than slaughter (Surah 2:191, 217) and that Muslims should fight (the Arabic word for ‘fight’ implies ‘kill’) until there is no more fitna (Sura 2:193; 8:39). The implication is that shedding of non-Muslim blood is preferable to Muslim suffering.

Ibn Kathir, a celebrated and influential medieval commentator on the Qur’an, promoted a broader understanding of fitna. For him, even disbelief in Islam, or ‘hindering’ Muslims from following Islam was fitna, an evil worse than killing:

Allah indicated that these men [i.e. non-Muslims] are committing disbelief in Allah, associating with Him (in the worship) and hindering from His path, and this is a much greater evil and more disastrous than killing.

This origin story of Islam, which weighed killing non-Muslims up against Muslim suffering, declaring that the latter is the greater evil of the two, is further reinforced by the way the Qur’an dehumanizes non-Muslims. It does this, for example, by using the term kafir to refer to disbelievers in Islam. The word kafir attributes dishonesty and deception to disbelievers, marking them as guilty. It is a very derogatory term.

Another Quranic reinforcement of non-Muslim guilt is found in the many ‘punishment stories’ of the Qur’an. The punishment stories are stories of the past in which disbelievers opposed believers, until Allah intervened, violently killing the disbelievers and rescuing the believers.

To summarise, core values and narratives in the foundational texts of Islam promote the idea that Muslim victimhood is a very great evil, and this is used to justify killing non-Muslims. From this perspective, non-Muslim deaths are not as bad as Muslim suffering. This asymmetrical instinct underlies the many angry Muslim objections to condolences expressed by Western politicians for the massacre of 1,500 Jews on October 7.

It must be emphasized that not all Muslims think like this. My point is that some Muslims do, and there are very strong reasons in the canonical texts of Islam for this bias. The origin story of Islam bases the morality of its turn to violence upon an appeal to Muslim victimhood. Downplaying Muslim victimhood undermines Muslims’ claimed right to militancy. It undercuts their right to fight.

Let’s now turn from the theological to the practical.

Which countries support Hamas?

The three countries that provide the most direct support for Hamas, as an official policy of the state, are Iran, Turkey and Qatar. Key Hamas leaders live in Qatar, which also supports the Muslim Brotherhood, as does Turkey. Normally Shi’ite Iran would be a natural opponent of Sunni Hamas; however, it suits Iran’s geopolitical goals to sponsor Hamas’ military arm with weapons, training and intelligence.

In addition to this state support, there are Muslims all over the world who support Hamas financially through donations via a form of religious tax. Every Muslim is required – as one of the five “pillars” of Islam – to give away a proportion of their wealth every year in a religious tax, which is known as zakat. Hamas is known to siphon off funds given for social projects to support its military activities.

At the same time, although zakat is sometimes described as “charity”, helping the needy is only one of its legitimate uses. Another is jihad. By the rules of Islam, Hamas’ military arm would be seen by some Muslims as a legitimate recipient of “alms for jihad”.

Do other Middle Eastern nations support Hamas?

This is complicated.

Hamas is a wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, and one of the Brotherhood’s goals is to overthrow regimes that it considers to be standing in the way of a full Islamic system. This potentially includes governments in Islamic states all across the Middle East.

This makes the Brotherhood a threat to the rulers of nations, including the Saudis, who, together with Egypt, Syria, Bahrain and the Emirates, have banned the Brotherhood, calling it a terrorist organisation.

(Some of the Muslims across the Middle East who have objected on social media to Hamas’ massacres are opponents of the Muslim Brotherhood.) The Saudis are also engaged in bitter proxy wars with Iran, which sponsors Hamas.

Nevertheless, many Muslims in these anti-Brotherhood nations are sympathetic to the Palestinian cause. Because of this sympathy, even though the Saudis regard Hamas as a threat to their security, an Israeli military campaign to eradicate Hamas will make it politically very difficult for the Saudis to continue on the Abraham Accords path of rapprochement with Israel. (Nevertheless, if only for the sake of their own security, the Saudis would not be unhappy to see Hamas destroyed.)

Why do some Muslims in our own nation support Hamas? What does it mean for our future?

Of the Muslims who have come out to protest in support of Hamas, many will be sympathetic to and shaped by the spiritual dynamics already described in this and previous posts. They will reject the legitimacy of Israel on religious grounds and want to see it destroyed.

The pro-Palestinian demonstrations taking place across Western nations have shown that there are at least some Muslims within these nations who are only too pleased about the attacks of October 7. This implies that a religious ideology like that of Hamas is entrenched among some Muslims in Western nations.

Of course, none of this is new information. For decades now, security agencies across the West have been keeping a watchful eye on citizens who believe in and advocate for Islamist ideology like that of Hamas.

Hamas must have known that Israel would respond with airstrikes against Gaza. Why bring such a calamity down on their own people?

The attacks on October 7 will lead – and already have led – to many Muslim casualties. This is, of course, a great tragedy. However, this was intentional, and is calculated to increase support for Hamas.

We have been told by the Israelis that around 1,500 jihadis who came in from Gaza were killed in Israel over the ensuing days. There are also many casualties in the Gaza bombardment, and even more Gazan casualties will result if Israeli ground troops enter Gaza.

All in all, thousands of Gazans will die as a result of Hamas’ attack.

Hamas knew this. Indeed, they are counting on it. Hamas complains about Palestinian casualties, while deliberately taking actions that increase these casualties. How can this be?

First, it is part of Hamas’ ideology that every Muslim killed in the war against Israel is a martyr who will attain paradise. This is something that, in their view, every Muslim should aspire to. From Hamas’ perspective, Muslims are fortunate to die in this way.

Second, Hamas counts on Gazan casualties to increase sympathy and support for their cause. They want to drive a wedge between Israelis and Muslims everywhere, and the best, proven way to do this is by causing many, many Muslim casualties at the hands of the Israelis. Hamas is deliberately sacrificing its own people for the sake of what they believe will be certain victory. (This is also the reason why Hamas is known to hide and shoot off rockets in Gazan schools, even though this endangers Palestinian children.)

___

Originally published at Mark Durie’s Substack. Photo: Hadi Mohammad/Wikimedia Commons

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3 Comments

  1. 0420391077f8111996bb838f71e47c0f9bd9c371f65b3429541324068047dbf1?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Countess Antonia Maria Violetta Scrivanich 1 November 2023 at 9:49 am - Reply

    Patricia Karavelas of the ABC persists in saying “1,000 Palestinian children a week are killed by Israeli air strikes “. How does she get these figures ? Also, we should note approx. 40% ( or more ) of Palestinians are children as many Palestinian families have 8 or more children, so , this is why children are killed. They are not specifically targeted, unlike what Hamas did on October 7 to Israeli babies !
    Palestinians could move out of the danger areas as suggested 3 weeks ago by Israel. It is their choice to stay in the line of fire.
    Censorship , ie the media ban on showing the decapitated heads of Israeli men and babies, etc has fuelled the sympathy of people in the West in favour of Hamas. People have imagined “nice”, “civilised ” ” quick ” killings, eg a bullet , not the tortures, rapes and beheadings !
    Karavelas is a Greek name. “Kara “in Turkish means “black ” and was ususally used to denote a Moslem or a Greek convert or sympathiser with the Turkish Moslem occupation of Greece in the medieval period.

  2. 0420391077f8111996bb838f71e47c0f9bd9c371f65b3429541324068047dbf1?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Countess Antonia Maria Violetta Scrivanich 1 November 2023 at 1:47 pm - Reply

    I was very worried about what I wrote about ABC journalist , Patricia Karavelas’surname , so, I checked with Nikola Doucas Sardelis, Arabic Linguist and Islamic Affairs Analyst, who informs me : “Many Greek surnames of Turkish origin… the widespread phenomenon of Ottoman Greek Moslems apostastising from Islam and reverting back to Christian Orthodoxy after having been Turkicised in language and culture for generations. Such Turkish surnames …..common Turkish surname prefixes, eg Kara………to cover up the fact that they have ancestors who were Ottoman Greek Moslems…..most likely to have intermarried with other, non -Greek , Ottoman Moslems , …….. “.

  3. 0420391077f8111996bb838f71e47c0f9bd9c371f65b3429541324068047dbf1?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Countess Antonia Maria Violetta Scrivanich 1 November 2023 at 2:51 pm - Reply

    I got the spelling wrong . It is Karvelas , NOT Karavelas , but, it still sounds Turkish Greek in origin as many Turkish Moslem surnames start with “Kar “. ABC journalist Patricia Karvelas has admitted she is a lesbian. In my opinion , she is very bias in her reporting, including on the War in Gaza. She loudly interrupts persons she interviews to prevent them speaking what they were going to say if she knows they do not share her views.

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