Preface by CrisHam
I found this valuable article on the website "The Blogs of the Times of Israel" and decided to ask the author Jerry Hersh for the right to republish it here to amplify the audience.
Western citizens have been misinformed about the background and facts of the Middle East conflict since long - a bewildering phenomenon which to know and to understand can be identified as a key precondition for survival of our free civilization.
The sources of this distortion of history and of the legal position of Israel are mainly tax-empt, allegedly benevolent Organizations like NGOs and NPOs which have in common to be highly dependent on donors who dispose over enormous financial power.
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What Hamas Leaders Actually Want — In Their Own Words (Part 1)
By Jerry Hersh first published December 30, 2023 on TOI Blogs
The last 12 weeks have been a devastating, life-changing time for me and for most Jews around the world: at minimum, we are processing the events of October 7, 2023, the deadliest day of murdering Jews since the Holocaust, when six million Jews were systematically murdered by the Nazis. On October 7, approximately 3,000 Hamas terrorists entered Israel from Gaza by land, air and sea and carried out well-planned, well-coordinated, massive massacres of Jews; burning babies to death; engaging in mass rapes; executing parents in front of their children and children in front of their parents. More than 1,200 Jews were killed, and at least 3,300 maimed or injured that day, with more than 200, including babies, young children and the elderly, abducted and taken hostage. Many Israeli Arabs, US citizens, and citizens of Thailand and several other countries were also murdered, injured or kidnapped that day.
We are also processing the subsequent rage directed at Jews, including the reactions immediately after October 7. Hamas supporters around the world—including United Nations staff people—publicly celebrated the mass rape and slaughter of Jews with pride and joy. Neo-Nazis and white supremacists in the US joined in celebrating. And university administrators largely stayed silent about Hamas or equivocated while professors, students and others across the US publicly celebrated, excused or justified Hamas’s hideous acts—often calling for more. For me and many other Jews, having people in your area code or neighborhood openly calling for the murder of Jews has been disorienting, frightening, horrifying, alarming, and heartbreaking.
Since October 7, I have seen many brief explanations of Hamas that gloss over almost everything about the organization before turning to Israel’s response to Hamas’s pogrom. Many of us are so conditioned to keep the spotlight on Israeli Jews that we cannot truly see Hamas in the darkness. However, we cannot understand what happened on October 7 and subsequently, as well as the entire Israeli-Palestinian conflict, without understanding Hamas.
We must be absolutely clear-eyed about the following two truths about Hamas. First, Hamas exists for one and only one reason: it is on an eternal, holy mission to destroy Israel by killing the Jews. Second, Hamas leaders believe that any and all Palestinian lives must be sacrificed in pursuit of Hamas’s mission. Hamas’s leaders have said—over and over—what they are and what they want. And they have shown us that their deeds match their words. Understanding Hamas—and its particular brand of antisemitism—is crucial, because it shows the international community the path to saving thousands of lives.
What is Hamas?
The Palestinian Hamas terrorist organization was founded in 1987 to fulfill one and only one mission—a fundamentalist Sunni Islamist quest to annihilate Israel by killing Jews.
How do we know this? Because Hamas proclaims it in its 1988 founding, charter document, The Hamas Covenant. The second paragraph declares to all the world that, “Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it.” The introduction section promises “[o]ur struggle against the Jews is very great and very serious” and will only end when “the enemy is vanquished and Allah’s victory is realized,” and declares that Hamas and the people are ready “to sacrifice life and all that is precious for the sake of Allah.” Article 8 affirms that “Jihad is [Hamas’s] path and death for the sake of Allah is the loftiest of [Hamas’s] wishes.”
Article 7 states:
The Prophet, Allah bless him and grant him salvation, has said: ‘The Day of Judgement will not come about until Moslems fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Moslems, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.’
Article 12 instructs that resistance with the purpose to destroy Israel is “the individual duty of every Moslem” and that even “[a] woman can go out to fight the enemy without her husband’s permission.” Hamas’s charter instructs Palestinians to raise children to wage jihad against the Jews (Article 18) and warns Palestinians that peace negotiations, “peaceful solutions,” and normalization of the Jews are forbidden and that anyone who engages in them is a traitor destined for hell (Article 13).
And Hamas leaders tell us—over and over—they are dedicated to the sole goal of annihilating Israel by killing Jews. Following are just a few examples:
- On November 5, 2010, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas leader Mahmoud Al-Zahhar, after justifying the persecution and expulsions of Jews in various societies over the last millennium, proclaimed, “[t]he series of expulsions continues to this day. Blood continues to be shed, martyrs continue to fall, our sons continue to hoist the banner high, and Allah willing, their expulsion from Palestine in its entirety is certain to come. We are no weaker or less honorable than the peoples that expelled and annihilated the Jews. The day we expel them is drawing near.”
- On May 11, 2011, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas official and cleric Yunis Al-Astal explained, “[t]he [Jews] are brought in droves to Palestine so that the Palestinians – and the Islamic nation behind them – will have the honor of annihilating the evil of this gang,” promising, “[i]n just a few years, all the Zionists and the settlers will realize that their arrival in Palestine was for the purpose of the great massacre, by means of which Allah wants to relieve humanity of their evil.”
- On August 20, 2012, in a sermon broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas official Sheik Ahmad Bahr prayed, “Oh Allah, destroy the Jews and their supporters. Oh Allah, destroy the Americans and their supporters. Oh Allah, count them one by one, and kill them all, without leaving a single one.”
- On March 2, 2014, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas cleric Wael Al-Zard noted that “[t]he Palestinian woman . . . . is no longer satisfied merely with equipping her sons for Jihad,” but that now “[s]he equips herself, prepares herself, trains herself, and takes up arms herself.”
- On March 23, 2014, at a “Perseverance and Loyalty to the Martyr’s Path” rally, broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Ismail Haniyah, head of Hamas’s political bureau, proclaimed that “[w]e are a people that yearn for death, just as our enemies yearn for life,” and Hamas Interior Minister Fathi Hamad promised that Hamas would destroy Israel within a few years.
- On January 29, 2016, Haniyah explained, “East of the city of Gaza, there are heroes underground, digging through rocks and building tunnels. West of Gaza, there are heroes testing rockets every day. This is all in preparation – in tunnels underground, by means of missiles in the air, as well as in the sea, and everywhere. This constant preparation is for the sake of Palestine, Jerusalem, Al-Aqsa, and for the sake of the Jerusalem Intifada.”
- On July 12, 2018, at a rally broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamad predicted “the cleansing of Palestine of the filth of the Jews, and their uprooting from it, Allah willing” and “the establishment of the Caliphate, after the nation has been healed of its cancer – the Jews – Allah willing.”
- On November 16, 2018, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar declared that Israel “will never get anything but guns, fire, martyrdom, death, and killing” from Gaza.
- On July 22, 2018, during a speech broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Gaza Shari’a appeals court judge Sheikh Omar Nofal praised the six virtues of martyrdom, calling it an “individual duty incumbent upon the entire nation,” and asking “[h]ow can anyone cling to this world after hearing all of these great rewards?”
- On June 23, 2019, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas MP Marwan Abu Ras explained about Jews that, “everything people say about massacres and Holocaust – these are all lies. Hitler may have hated them, but it was because of their deeds and crimes.”
- On July 12, 2019, at a March of Return rally that aired on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas Political Bureau member Fathi Hammad implored “you seven million Palestinians abroad, enough warming up! There are Jews everywhere! We must attack every Jew on planet Earth – we must slaughter and kill them, with Allah’s help.” He instructed, “[w]e will die while exploding and cutting the necks and legs of the Jews. We will lacerate them and tear them to pieces, Allah willing!”
- On May 7, 2021, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, senior Hamas official Fathi Hammad called for Palestinians in Jerusalem to “cut off the heads of the Jews.”
- On December 12, 2022, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, head of the Hamas Women’s Movement Rajaa Al-Halabi explained that a girl who sets out to be a “martyrdom-seeker” has “only one thing on her mind – to meet her Lord by means of her blood and her body parts,” noting that kindergarten teachers raise children to love Jihad.
- On April 8, 2022, on a broadcast on Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV, Hamas official Talal Nassar opined, “I believe that the occupation is heading towards annihilation, and on this platform, I swear by Allah, and let everybody remember this pledge: Those of us who will still be alive will tread with their pure feet… After we trample with our feet all over the skulls of the Zionists, we will tread on the land of Haifa, Jaffa, Tiberias, Jerusalem, and all of the West Bank and our dear [Gaza] Strip. There is no difference between the [borders of] 1967 and 1948.”
The MEMRI website documents Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV broadcasts over the years and translates them from Arabic to English. Hamas leaders say and broadcast this rhetoric constantly; release publications with this type of language; embed these messages in children’s programming; teach these goals in schools; and generally inundate Gaza with these messages continuously.
Hamas has delivered on its promise to kill Jews. During the span of more than three decades before October 7, Hamas perpetrated dozens of suicide bombings, hundreds of other in person attacks, and thousands of rocket and missile attacks—almost all targeting Israeli civilians—murdering hundreds of Israelis and injuring thousands of others. And these were only those attacks not thwarted by Israel. Because of these acts, in 1997 the US designated Hamas as a terrorist organization, with the European Union following suit in 2003.
In staying laser focused on its mission, on October 7, thousands of Hamas terrorists carried out systematic massacres of Jews in Israel, slaughtering, raping, burning, torturing, maiming, injuring or abducting more than 5,000 people, many of whom were devoted peace activists living in kibbutzim, socialist communal villages, right next to the Gaza border. Many Hamas terrorists chose to capture their rampages on video. ABC News describes some of the videos of carnage here. The Atlantic reported that Hamas’s “videos show pure, predatory sadism; no effort to spare those who pose no threat; and an eagerness to kill nearly matched by eagerness to disfigure the bodies of the victims.” According to the BBC, “[t]he footage, some taken from mobile phones of victims, also showed the abject fear of those who hid in safe rooms and shelters as the sounds of gunfire and explosions came closer.”
On the same day, Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’s political bureau, pledged that Hamas’s slaughtering of Jews will be joined by Palestinians in the West Bank, Arab Israelis in Israel, and Palestinians and their supporters around the world. He threatened Israeli Jews, “get out of our land. Get out of our sight. . . [t]his land is ours, Al-Quds is ours, everything [here] is ours. You are strangers in this pure and blessed land. There is no place or safety for you.” Likewise, on October 24, 2023, senior Hamas official Ghazi Hamad promised that October 7 “is just the first time, and there will be a second, a third, a fourth,” until Israel is “annihilated.” Hamas media adviser Taher Nounou told the New York Times on November 8, 2023, “I hope that the state of war with Israel will become permanent on all the borders and that the Arab world will stand with us.”
Jews have had to learn this lesson over and over: if people tell you they want to kill you, believe them.
Patterns of murderous antisemitism
So where does this seething, raging, sustained genocidal hatred of Jews come from? Hamas’s particular wrathful quest against the Jews is not a new phenomenon, but part of a longstanding pattern over time. Hamas’s genocidal anti-Zionism is but one modern iteration of antisemitism—referred to as the “oldest hatred.”
Antisemitism consists of an adaptive series of demonizing, defamatory, disparaging, derogatory, and dehumanizing assumptions, beliefs, myths, conspiracy theories, and narratives about Jews embedded in the culture, moral identity and worldviews of individuals, groups or societies. Jews, a tiny minority of the world’s population, are often seen as outsiders, the “other,” strangers who either stand out or do not quite fit in.
Based on this feeling that Jews do not belong, over centuries and millennia, in society after society, people have attributed negative characteristics to Jews, such as being greedy, untrustworthy, and doing anything to get what they want. Other pervasive accusations—largely conspiracy theories—are about specific behaviors such as Jews controlling the media, governments, and financial institutions behind the scenes with money and abuse of power.
Such beliefs and assumptions about Jews often lead to blame for the world’s problems. For approximately 2,000 years, in society after society, “what the Jews are up to” has been breaking news—and the news has never been good. Among many other things, Jews, who currently comprise approximately 15 million of the 8 billion people on earth (much less than 1%), have been blamed and scapegoated for harming innocent people via COVID-19; wildfires caused by space lasers; killing Jesus; economic crises; slavery in the US; hatred of white people in the US; the Bubonic plague; bad weather; and the attacks on the US on September 11, 2001.
Similarly, in addition to articulating Hamas’s genocidal aspirations, the Hamas Covenant explains that Jews use their money to control global media and all imperialistic countries and are behind all the wars in history (Article 22); that Jews are undermining societies, are behind the drug trade and alcoholism, and are annihilating Islam (Article 28); that Jews are endeavoring to take over the Middle East and then the world (Article 32); and that Jews are Nazis (Articles 20, 31, 32).
All the tropes and fables about “the Jews” imply that Jews are a monolith, nefariously planning evil deeds and executing evil plans. By projecting their problems on Jews, groups often conclude that if they make Jews go away, their problems will go away. Expressing solidarity in opposition to Jews often appears as a deep assertion of morality, values, identity, culture and community—an incredibly powerful force inspiring unusual passion. So, in place after place, Jews became viewed as harmful enemies of good people and were frequently persecuted, violently attacked, and driven from societies.
Contrary to the perceptions created by group after group, Jews are a diverse group of people. Jews have a wide range of skin colors, hold a multitude of complex identities, engage in a few different types of religious traditions—or none at all—and are politically diverse. But Jews are connected to each other as a people because they share common traditions, history, heritage, religion, ancestry, culture, memory, language, sense of core identity, and connection to the land of Israel.
The land of Israel has always been central to the Jewish religion, the history of Jews, and Jewish identity. For millennia, the exiled population of Jews in the diaspora was constantly forced to relocate because of hatred, discrimination hostility, persecution, and pogroms. After experiencing hostility, violence and mass murder for generations throughout Eastern Europe and in Russia, some Jews in the late 19th century and early 20th century purchased land from previous owners in what was then part of the Ottoman Empire as part of a national liberation movement—Zionism. Jews sought refuge and self-determination in their ancestral homeland of Israel, where various sized communities of Jews have lived for approximately 3,000 years.
After genocidal antisemitism culminated in the systematic slaughter of six million mostly European Jews in the Holocaust, the State of Israel—approximately the size of New Jersey—was founded in 1948 and formally admitted as a nation-state by the UN in 1949. A large portion of Jews in the nascent country were refugees from Middle Eastern or North African countries, where they had deep roots, before largely being driven from those societies around the time Israel was born.
The existence of a State of Israel that could protect and defend its citizens meant that Jews no longer lived or died at the whim of their neighbors. That is the essence of Zionism.
And Hamas’s genocidal mission to eliminate Israel is the essence of anti-Zionism.