[lit-ideas] Hitchens on Hamas Landslide
- From: Eric Yost <eyost1132@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 30 Jan 2006 16:43:37 -0500
Suicide Voters
How Hamas dooms Palestine.
By Christopher Hitchens
Almost all our commentary on the Israel-Palestine
dispute is unconsciously ethnocentric and
practically every paragraph on the Hamas election
victory has followed this bias by asking what it
means either for the Israelis or for the "peace
process." It might be worth just thinking about
what it could mean for the Palestinians.
The preferred analysis, which certainly derives
from a kernel of fact, is that the vote represents
a repudiation of the baroque corruption of the
Arafat gang (which was so brilliantly anatomized
by David Samuels in the Atlantic Monthly of
September 2005). But there are at least two
difficulties with this comforting conclusion. For
one thing, anyone voting for a clerical party in
the hope of abolishing corruption is asking to be
considered a fool and also treated as one: There
is corruption all over the Middle East, but it is
nowhere as flagrant and exploitative and damaging
as in the region's two main theocracies, Iran and
Saudi Arabia. Those who come to power as puritans
lose no time in becoming positively gorgeous in
the excess of their corruption, and Hamas will not
be an exception to this rule.
There is also an element of condescension in the
"corruption" explanation. Hamas says that it wants
an Islamic state all the way from the Jordan to
the Mediterranean. It publishes and promulgates
the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Why not
assume that it is at least partly serious about
all this? For years, the PLO leadership has been
at least officially committed to a two-state
solution and has at least officially made a
distinction between Judaism and Zionism. It has
also renounced the disgusting tactic of suicide
murder. The emergence of a party that considers
all of these evolutions as betrayals may have to
do with something more than the provision of
welfare. I am uncomfortably reminded of the tripe
talked by many liberals and leftists about the
Khomeini revolution in Iran in 1979, where it was
said that religion was merely the form that
protest against the corrupt and repressive shah
happened to take, and that the mullahs could be
contained.
It's reasonably well-attested that the growth of
Hamas originated partly with a very cynical
Israeli decision to build up fundamentalism in
Gaza as a weapon against the secular and leftist
elements who were then running the Palestinian
resistance. Gen. Yitzhak Segev, the military
commander in the Strip, said as much to the New
York Times in 1981. Whether that is true or not I
don't know, but I do remember sitting in the Gaza
garden of Dr. Haider Abdel-Shafi in the summer of
1981, after his clinic had been burned down by an
Islamist mob shouting "God is great." Dr.
Abdel-Shafi was not a corrupt Fatah official but a
very conscientious and skilled physician, who
headed the Red Crescent in Gaza. (He later gave a
brilliant opening speech, at the Madrid peace
conference in 1991, as leader of the Palestinian
civilian delegation.) Segev dryly noted to me
that, for the first and only time in anyone's
memory, the Israeli occupation forces had not
turned up to a scene of violent disorder, and had
simply let the clinic burn.
These tactics of divide and rule must now
presumably be a cause of regret to the Israelis
who stupidly thought they were so cleverly
manipulating the situation. But the position of a
non-Muslim or even non-Hamas Palestinian might
soon be very unenviable also. A significant number
of Palestinians are at least nominally Christian
and have traditionally voted for leftist and
secular parties: In recent years their centers of
population in towns like Nazareth and Bethlehem
have come under increasing pressure to conform to
"Islamic Republic" rules. "In the Islamist
Palestinian state," announced Hamas' leader
Mahmoud al-Zahar before the election, "every
citizen will be required to act in accordance with
the codes of Islamic law." A Christmas report from
Bethlehem in the Wall Street Journal made an
attempt to grapple with this grievously
underreported subject. It told of female Christian
employees in the Bethlehem municipality who were
being forbidden to greet male visitors with a
handshake. It contained an interview with the
leader of the Hamas group on the Bethlehem City
Council, who announced his party's intention to
impose the al-Jeziya at some point in the future.
This is the tax, sometimes called the dhimmi or
"unbeliever" tax, that is levied on all those who
will not profess that there is one god and that
Mohammed is his messenger. Aside from the
offensiveness of this, imagine the opportunities
for Ottoman-style corruption that it affords.
It is shallow and short-term, therefore, to write
up the election result as a bitter fruit for the
Bush administration's democracy initiative. (What
was the alternative? No elections? Elections but
without Hamas participation?) This is, rather,
another stage in a process of coercive
Islamization that has been going on for some time.
The opposition party was already better organized
than, and had almost as many guns as, the nominal
Palestinian "government." It has a host of
unemployed and semi-educated and well-armed young
men, who will no doubt relish the task of bullying
women and "unofficially" collecting the al-Jeziya
revenues. Critics of the "road map" correctly
pointed to the enclosure of Palestinians in
ghettolike enclaves and Bantustans. Wait until you
see what life looks like in a hermetic society,
cut off by the Wall whose permanence this election
almost certainly guarantees and subjected to
Islamic rule.
It's agonizing to watch the Palestinians choose a
leadership that is openly aligned with the
moribund and vicious dictatorships in Iran and
Syria. The time when the PLO called for a
democratic secular state seems a very long while
ago. But just look at the primeval propaganda of
Hamas, which speaks of a land that is holy to one
god and dedicated only to his fanatical
supporters. Where has one heard that evil rubbish
before? Only imagine if the Israelis had been
forced to recognize a West Bank and Gaza state
when the PLO first accepted it 20 years ago. Ariel
Sharon's real monument will be the fact that he
acknowledged all this at precisely the moment when
it had become too late to do so. It becomes
plainer than ever that Israel is not the
alternative to the diaspora, but an especially
embattled and compromised part of it.
http://www.slate.com/id/2135098/fr/rss/
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