25 March 2006

The Democracy Game

By David Remnick


Every Friday, just before midday prayers, thousands of men and women in the West Bank town of Dura stop to gossip and shop in the market stalls that lead to the steps of the grand Mosque. I visited Dura on the first Friday after Hamas had swept the Palestinian elections. And yet that morning all the talk was of cartoons: a dozen caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad had been published in the Danish daily Jyllands-Posten, igniting a worldwide paroxysm of apocalyptic hysteria that brought into use, once more, that “Star Wars”- like phrase “a clash of civilizations.”
The imam at the Dura Grand Mosque is a man in his late forties named Nayef Rajoub. Although Sheikh Nayef is a leader of Hamas and the top vote-getter in the entire West Bank, his supporters told me that he, too, was focussed on the cartoons. He would be speaking that day on the Danish caricatures as a “weapon of the Western Crusaders.”
Outside the mosque, I met a group of people standing around a fruit-and-vegetable store run by a man called Eichmann Abu Atwan. I thought I’d misheard his name, but he smiled, showed his identity card and said, “Eichmann. Like the Nazi.” His father had named him during the trial of Adolf Eichmann, in Jerusalem in 1961. “He was an early fighter, killing Israelis in the seventies,” Eichmann said proudly. “And my brother was such a fierce fighter that a Syrian paper compared him to Abdel-Aziz al-Rantisi” – one of the founders of Hamas. Eichmann was a supporter of Fatah, the Palestinian nationalist group that Ysir Arafat founded some fifty years ago, and, like everyone else I’d been talking to in the occupied territories, he said that Hamas had won for a variety of reasons: the financial corruption of Fatah and its leadership; the utter failure of the Oslo process; a marked increase in Islamic practice throughout Gaza and the West Bank; Hamas’s dual mastery in providing social services for Palestinians and launching armed assaults on the Israelis. “Time has run out for Fatah,” Eichmann said.
As the muezzin summoned the people of Dura to the mosque, Nayef’s fraternal twin, Yasir, stopped by the store. “Are you all coming to hear the Sheikh?” he said. Like Nayef, Yasir had been affiliated with Hamas from the start, but their older brother, Jibril Rajoub, was on of Arafat’s most powerful aides and a Fatah lord. Jibril had run the Preventive Security Service in the West Bank, and he was one of the losers in the elections.
Prayers began at eleven-thirty, and we filed into the mosque and knelt down. The walls were whitewashed. A dozen fluorescent tubes dangled low from the ceiling, giving off a vague yellow light. The room was filled entirely with men, but I was hardly inconspicuous. My translator, an aspiring young journalist from the West Bank named Khaldoun, quickly came to realize that his principal talk, after rendering the Sheikh’s sermon into English, was to explain to all who inquired (and many did) that the foreign visitor was “not Danish.” Al Jazeera and the other Arab-language television stations had broadcast fiery protests throughout Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.
“Danish?” a man asked me.
Khaldoun responded with a prolonged explanation featuring the word”Am-rika,” which has not been something to brag about in recent years, but this time it did the trick.
Sheikh Nayef has a graying beard, close-cropped hair, and a tranquil, strangely distant gaze. His posture was as straight as the microphone stand before him. I was told that outside the mosque his personality was shy, even remote – a marked contrast to his worldly and fierce-looking brother Fibril – but he soon rose to a register of high dudgeon in his sermon. The Danish cartoons, the Sheikh said, were reminiscent of the calumnies hurled at the Prophet fourteen hundred years ago. Muhammad “was accused of being a magician, of being insane. The same thing is happening now in Denmark, in France, although many mosques in Europe are spreading his message… What happened in Denmark is an offense against Muhammad and his followers. It is an act of aggression against us and against our feelings.”
The Sheikh was not about to get into the origins of the demonstrations, how they had been fanned not only by an imam in Copenhagen and various jihadi groups but also by regimes, like the Saudis’, that make a show of their piety in order to placate their Islamist subjects. “That’s not my topic today,” he said. His theme was power and humiliation, Western offense and Islamic will. The cartoon affair, he said, was yet another episode in the Crusaders’ assault on the faith, and the reason for “the Prophet’s humiliation is the weakness of our nation.” The demonstrations proved that Hamas and the Islamic movement around the world were unimpressed by such “excuses” as freedom of speech, and were absolutely determined to reject the pieties of “the heathen.”
The Sheikh continued, “The people who bow down to the White House and to the Western way of life must all wake up and realize that this life is not suitable for us. Today we are told to accept our enemies, to give up our principles, to give up resistance, and do the same as the previous government” – the Palestinian Authority under Fatah. “But that is not our model. Our model is the Prophet Muhammad. What did the previous government get from compromise? It got failure, the denial of our rights, a blockade – Arafat was caught in a blockade. We have no partner in Israel. A people with principles will not repeat this failure. If our people repeat this, the next thing will be the Israelis telling us to stop praying, to stop fasting, to change our names, to take off the Hijab. We will not repeat these mistakes. Palestine is for the Muslims, and no one can give it up… Those who injure God and his Prophet will suffer now and after death.”

Dura is a town in the region of Hebron, and Hebron is the largest city in the West Bank. It is also one of the most purely Islamic cities in the occupied territories, and a center of terror. One reason for the extraordinary tension in Hebron, beyond the general privations of the nearly four-decades-long occupation, is the presence, amid a hundred and fifty thousand Palestinians, of five hundred Jewish settlers protected by more than two thousand Israeli troops. On the Jewish holiday of Purim in 1994, a doctor and settler from Brooklyn, Baruch Goldstein, opened fire with an assault rifle on Arabs praying at the Tomb of the Patriarchs, killing twenty-nine and setting off riots and reprisals all over the region. A few years ago, at the height of the Al Aqsa intifada, Jihad, a soccer team sponsored by a local mosque, instituted a rigorous training schedule: the players fasted on Mondays and Thursdays, pledged daily allegiance to Hamas, and practiced nearly every afternoon wearing jerseys bearing a hand brandishing an axe and the inscription “Al Jihad: Prepare for Them.” The team’s fame relied only secondarily on an impressive record on the field. Eight team members, including the player-coach, carried out suicide bombing operations, one after the other, killing more than twenty people and wounding dozens more. The city exhausted its sense of hope years ago. What now greets every visitor on the road running south from Jerusalem into Hebron is a huge green banner reading, “Welcome to Hamas City!”
Hamas, which was founded in 1987, during the first intifada, and is considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the United States, and the European Union, won seventy-four of the hundred and thirty-two seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council. Fatah won only forty-three. Hamas swept the slate in the Hebron region, taking nine of nine seats. Ever since Arafat signed the Oslo accords, in 1993, and the Palestinian leadership ended its long exile in Tunis to establish the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, he had used the leaders of Fatah, men like Jibril Rajoub, to make sure that Islamists like Nayef Rajoub did not extend their influence beyond the mosque. Jibril made his bones as a resistance fighter by spending seventeen years of his youth in Israeli prisons – much of that time for throwing a dud grenade at a convoy of Israeli soldiers – but his political prospects in middle age have been dashed. As Preventive Security chief, he jailed members of Hamas and other Islamist groups. Soon it is likely that Hamas will control Preventive Security – its five thousand troops and its arms.
Th Rajoub family was conservative and provincial, but not especially religious. Nayef became devout when he studied Islamic law in Jordan. Yasir, who is a director of an Islamic charity that looks after orphans, has been arrested nine times and spent a total of eleven years in Israeli jails. In 1992, he and Nayef, along with more than four hundred other member of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, were forcibly deported by Israel to the mountain village of Marjal-Zahour, in southern Lebanon, where they lived in tents for a year until the government let them go home. The meetings and discussions conducted among the deportees helped form the core of the Islamist leadership that is now coming to power; the Islamists called their Lebanese exile “Ibn Taymiyya University,” referring to a medieval Islamic Thinker. Seven of the nine Hamas candidates in Hebron had been among the deportees. When I asked Yasir Rajoub about his brother Jibril, he smiled magnanimously and said that the family was close and the brothers’ disagreements were “nothing personal.”
Jibril even arrested me and detained me for a month,” he said. “I was taken to Jericho,” where Preventive Security had its offices and jail cells. “Others were tortured in that jail, but not me – maybe because Jibril is my brother. When the Israelis arrested us, Jibril tried to look after us. He sent money to my family.”
After the midday prayers, Sheikh Nayef accepted congratulations for his sermon on the steps of the mosque and in the market stalls. He shook hands, blessed children, and then, because he does not own a car, started looking for a ride home. He invited me along for lunch.
“Jibril is rich, but the Sheikh is poor, a simple man,” one of his admirers told me. “He had to seek a loan just to pay the fee to get his name on the election ballot.” The Fatah chieftains are known in the territories for skimming aid money and for taking kickbacks on businesses like oil, gas, and concrete. Their opulent houses, on the beach in Gaza, in the hills of the West Bank, mock the crumbling apartment blocks of their subjects.
The Sheikh’s modest house squats at the end of a pitted dirt road on the outskirts of Dura. A group of women, including the Sheikh’s wife, daughters, and nieces, were in the garage tending a gas stove and stacking loaves of pita; in a cauldron they were boiling hunks of mutton and rice. With some of his children trailing behind him, the Sheikh led his guests – family members, aides, and friends from the mosque – into the house, to a room furnished only with carpets and a floor lamp. A teen-aged son spread several oilcloths over the floor and another laid out plates and platters of food.
“Go ahead,” the Sheikh said. “It’s not easy preaching for so long. Let’s eat for a while and then we’ll talk.”

It is an irony of history that the first Islamist party in the Arab world to come to power in democratic elections is based not in Cairo or Amman but, rather, in the territories occupied by the Jewish state. President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah of Jordan have kept Islamists in their countries at bay by alternating repression, co-option, and limited access to meaningless ballots; Mubarak and Abdullah were just as dismayed as the Israelis to see the rise of Hamas on their borders.
Israel and the United States are already discussing schemes to isolate and destabilize the Palestinian Authority if Hamas refuses to recognize Israel and renounce violence. According to a report by Steven Erlanger in the Times, the Israelis could cause a financial crisis in the Palestinian territories by refusing to hand over the more than fifty million dollars a month in taxes and customs duties that they collect on behalf of the Palestinian Authority. They could make economic life even more arduous by tightening control on the movement of goods and worker between Israel and the territories. Western governments have said that they, too, could discontinue financial aid. These moves might result in a billion-dollar annual deficit leaving the Palestinian Authority unable to pay its hundred and forty thousand employees, who support more than a third of the Palestinian population. If Hamas decides to rebel rather than yield to outside pressure, that could lead to yet another armed conflict with Israel – a third intifada. The Israelis are gambling that Hamas – which won the elections without a majority of the votes and gained more support for its promises of reform than for its extremist views on Israel – would rather compromise than be forced to choose between poverty and war.
Islamist resistance movements appeared in Palestine well before the creation of Israel. The military battalions of Hamas are named for Izz al-Din al-Qassam, a Syrian-born sheikh who, during the Mandate period, carried out numerous attacks on British and Jewish officials. (He was killed by the British in 1935.) In one sermon he said, “Nothing will save us but our arms.”
The Muslim Brotherhood, the root organization of Hamas and of nearly every contemporary Islamist group in the Arab world, was founded in 1928 by a schoolteacher named Hassan al-Banna, who decried both English colonial rule and secular Arab nationalism. For Banna and the Muslim Brothers, the Koran was both spiritual guide and worldly constitution. In the nineteen-sixties, as the Brotherhood gained popularity, the Egyptian ruler Gamal Abdel Nasser cracked down, trying and executing the group’s most influential and radical thinker, Sayyid Qutb.
In the same series of arrests, the Egyptian police briefly imprisoned a young Gazan sheikh named Ahmed Yassin. When, following the 1967 Sixty-Day War, Gaza became Israeli-occupied territory, Sheikh Yassin set up a range of charities and social-service organizations, and took over professional associations and the Islamic University of Gaza, all of which were linked to the authority of the mosques. Because thousands of Palestinians worked each day in Israeli cities like Tel Aviv, Yassin was obsessed with the whore-of-Babylon influence that such places might have on his people. In 1973, he started the Islamic Center, the Al-Mujamma al-Islami, whose aim was to strengthen the authority of Islam over the population.
“In those days, Yassin’s concern was men and women swimming together,” Emmanuel Sivan, one of Israel’s leading scholars of modern Islam, told me.
Yassin’s emphasis was on da’wa – social work and preaching – and he skillfully attracted aid from local donors, the Palestinian diaspora, and other Islamists abroad. The Israeli government, which was pouring its resources into combating Arafat, determined that the Islamists were more of a threat to the P.L.O. than to Israel, and so did little to get in Yassin’s way. “Israel operated on the simple Western logic of supporting the rival of your enemy,” said Shaul Mishal, a professor at Tel Aviv University and the co-author of a scholarly history, “Th e Palestinian Hamas.” “That strategy did not last long.”
By the early eighties, many disaffected young men among the Palestinian Islamists were getting involved in the violent resistance to Israel, which was dominated by P.L.O. fighters. To keep them within the authority of the mosques, Yassin and his associates began importing arms and organizing militias of their own. When, in December, 1987, the intifada began – first in the Jabalia refugee camp, in Gaza, then throughout the occupied territories – the Islamists joined the rebellion full force, and Hamas, an acronym for Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya, the Islamic Resistance Movement, was born. (“Hamas” means “zeal.”)

The Hamas charter, a nine-thousand-word document adopted by the leadership in August, 1988, remains the group’s ideological foundation, melding Islamic fundamentalism with a national movement. From the start, the P.L.O. had included a range of ideologies and tendencies, among them Arab nationalism and Marxism, but Hamas rejected such “foreign” influence. In its charter, historical Palestine – the territory min al-nahr ila al-bahr, from the River Jordan to the Mediterranean – is declared part of the Islamic waqf (“endowment”), consecrated for future Muslim generations until Judgement Day,” and indivisible. To relinquish any part of the land – in other words, to permit the presence of an alien Jewish state – is forbidden. Hamas “strives to raise the banner of Allah over every inch of Palestine,” the charter reads, for, under the Jews, “the state of truth has disappeared and been replaced by the state of evil.”
The Hamas charter also reflects an unabashedly anti-Semitic, conspiracy-based view of regional and world history. Article 22 asserts that the Jewish people have “ignited revolutions” throughout the world from 1789 to 1917. Jews triggered the First World War in order to destroy the Islamic caliphate and the Second World War in order to make “huge profits from trading war material.” In short, “No war broke out anywhere without their fingerprints on it.” The Jews also have formed “secret organizations” and “destructive spying” agencies – Freemasons, Rotary Clubs, Lions Clubs, and others – to promote the Zionist project, which “has no limits…. After Palestine it will strive to expand from the Nile to the Euphrates.” This plan is “outlined in ‘The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,’” the tsarist-era forgery of a Jewish plan for world domination.
The charter’s view of negotiations and “the so-called peaceful solutions” is unambiguous. “There is no solution to the Palestinian problem except by Jihad. The initiatives, proposals, and international conferences are but a waste of time and sheer futility.”
After the first intifada and the advent of the Oslo process, in 1993, Arafat became wary of Hamas and its refusal to accept the peace process, Israel’s right to exist, or, above all, his authority in Gaza and the West Bank. According to Mishal’s book, Arafat once referred to Hamas as a “Zulu tribe,” an allusion to the Inkatha movement, which refused to come under the command of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress. Arafat also found himself competing with Hamas for money; when he supported Iraq in the Gulf War in 1991, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and other states on the Arabian Peninsula began diverting to Hamas funds that had once gone to the P.L.O. In the early nineteen-nineties, according to Gilles Kepel, the author of “Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam,” Hamas gained adherents from three social classes: impoverished young men, who took part in the armed resistance; the devout middle classes; and Islamist intellectuals in the region and in the West.
Israel and United States, in the meantime, grew deeply frustrated with Arafat’s inability, or unwillingness, to confront Hamas, which had become a pioneer in the art of terror. The first modern suicide bombing was carried out in 1981 against the Iraqi Embassy in Beirut; in 1983, Hezbollah, the Iranian-funded Shiite militia in southern Lebanon, used suicide bombers to attack American and French barracks in Beirut. In 1993, Hamas took it up with terrifying frequency.
After the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, in 1995, Hamas became perhaps the most important factor in the search for a successor: a series of bombings that it carried out in Israel during the campaign turned Israeli voters toward the right-wing Likud Party and brought Benjamin Netanyahu, who promised no concessions to the Palestinians, to power. Netanyahu declared himself determined to destroy Hamas, but he managed instead to return the favour, ordering an operation that helped its leadership immeasurably.
In 1997, Netanyahu dispatched a team of Mossad agents to Amman to assassinate Khaled Meshal, the chief Hamas leader abroad. Two agents approached Meshal on the street from behind and one pricked his ear with a needle loaded with a deadly nerve toxin. Meshal’s bodyguard, however, turned out to be a spectacular athlete and ran down the Israeli agents, first by car and then on foot, beat them, and brought them to a local prison. Once the Israeli agents confessed to the poisoning on videotape, King Hussein, furious that the Mossad had carried out the mission on Jordanian territory long after he had made peace with Israel, called Netanyahu and demanded the antidote to the poison. Netanyahu refused. Only after Hussein appealed to Bill Clinton and the Israeli press began criticizing Netanyahu for ordering such a spectacularly stupid operation did he relent. Meshal survived. Hussein, who had his own Palestinian majority to placate, extracted another concession from Netanyahu: rather than lose the peace with Jordan, the Israeli Prime Minister agreed to release Sheikh Yassin from prison.
For several years, Yassin served as the strategic and spiritual guide for Hamas. Israel maintained that he gave the final assent to terrorist operations.
In 2004, during the Al Aqsa intifada and the Israeli attempt to wipe out the Hamas leadership, Yassin was killed in a missile attack. Since then, when I have visited Hamas leaders in Gaza and the Muslim Brotherhood’s headquarters in Cairo, I’ve seen portraits of Yassin in every office. “He is our holy man,” Mahmoud al-Zahar, the Hamas leader in Gaza told me. “He is our greatest martyr.”

The prinicpal Hamas leaders - Zahar and Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza, and Musa Abu-Marzuq and Khaled Mashel in Damascus – have never feigned innocence of the attacks committed in their name, but they are fairly schooled in the arts of diplomatic wrangling and media manipulation. Their public language attempts to yoke contradictory goals. Like the leaders of the I.R.A. decades ago, they are trying to enter the realm of politics without relinquishing the prerequisites of armed resistance and the purity of ideological rejectionism. They want to maintain the support of their most radical fighters without losing the funding of the European Union. They hint at the possibility of a hudna – a prolonged truce – if Israel retreats to the borders that existed before the Six-Day War, but they also reserve the “historical” goal of absolute dominion made plain in their charter.
Sheikh Hayef Rajoub is more typical of the men and women of Hamas who will make up the majority of the next Palestinian legislature. Unlike the Fatah politicians, who have traveled the world, navigated diplomatic receptions, and dealt closely with the Israelis for may years, they are provincial, inexperienced, and leery of the task of governing even a proto-state. Few polls showed that Hamas would win the election, and its leaders were as surprised as Fatah or Israeli intelligence. But now Sheikh Nayef was prepared to be magnanimous toward his more famous brother.
“In the past, my brother and I had reasons for tension,” he said as we ate the last of the mutton. “These days, our relationship is better than ever. We are civilized people, and everyone has his choice, including religion. My choice is Islam and Jibril’s choice is something else. I think Jibril did pray for a little while and then stopped. It’s sad for me.”
The Sheikh felt that he was part of a “worldwide historical wave.” He said that Hamas, after years of keeping its distance from official politics, had decided to “accept the democracy game,” and he was sure that if the same opportunity were available elsewhere in the Arab world Islamist parties would prevail. “The failure of all other ideologies is sending Mulims toward Islam, and this is the case in Palestine,” he said. “Twenty years ago when I was working in the mosque, around a hundred and fifty, two hundred people came on Friday. Now it’s a few thousand. At that time, there was only one mosque in Dura. Now there are twelve.” Hamas even won a considerable crossover vote, polling well in cities with sizable Christian populations, such as Ramallah and Bethlehem.
The Sheikh said he knew that, despite the heavy vote for Hamas, the majority of Palestinians tell pollsters that they favor an end to the occupation and a two-state solution. But Hamas, he added, would “never” bow to Israeli, American, European, and even Egyptian demands that it acknowledge the existence of Israel and disarm.
“How can the world want us to recognize the state of Israel when Israel will not give us the right to exist, when it took our land and imposed occupation and does not recognize our rights?” he said. “Resistance for us is a legitimate action. Divine and human laws give us the right to resist.”
Hamas has not executed any suicide bombings in the past few months, but the Israelis do not take the lull to reflect a nascent desire for compromise. “The conflict with Israel is not a matter of land,” Sheikh Nayef said. “It’s a matter of ideology. All the Israeli slogans – the ‘chosen people,” the “promised land’ – the basis of their state is religious. But these are religious legends, false stories. God did not give them this land as if Israelis, Jews, are preferred above all other peoples on earth and all other peoples were meant to serve them.” The Sheikh went on, “Two hundred years ago in Europe, they were conservative people, but now the fashion world, the media – it’s controlled by the Jews. And their people are sexually open. Freud, a Jew, was the one who destroyed morals, and Marx destroyed divine ideologies. If it is not all Jews, well, they were a big part of this. And now it is the Jewish lobby in the United States that is setting policy in the world and causing the United States to wage war all over the world.”

One of the biggest financial supporters of Hamas has been the fundamentalist Shiite regime in Tehran, according to Israeli and U.S. intelligence agencies. At a conference in Tehran last October call “A World Without Zionism,” Iran’s current President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, urged the Palestinians to maintain a maximalist position toward Israel. Quoting Ayatollah Khomeini’s statement that Israel “must be eliminated from the pages of history,” Ahmadinejad instructed the Palestinians never to bow to the demands of diplomacy. They must not recognize Israel – and anyone who does, he declared, “should know that he will burn in the fire of the Ummah,” the Islamic nation.
I asked the Sheikh if he agreed with Ahmadinejad’s argument, much publicized in recent months, that the Holocaust was a myth, and a pretext for the creation of Israel.
The question, the Sheikh said, had direct bearing on his morning homily about the Danish cartoons and the will of the Muslims to resist humiliation: “When Ahmadinejad spoke, everyone in the West condemned him, but why didn’t the West say that Ahmadinejad had his right of freedom of speech?” The Sheikh smiled like one who has scored an irrefutable point. “If the issue concerns Jews, it’s always anti-Semitism, anti-Semitism, but when it concerns other religions it’s a matter of freedom of speech.”
But did he agree with the Iranian leader? I asked.
The Sheikh smiled again, this time indulgently.
“If I answer, you’ll provide me with a real headache, won’t you?” he said. “I don’t want to tell you my opinion on this. No doubt, it’s too controversial. If I say I agree with Ahmadinejad, Hamas will be added to the list of those who deny the Holocaust. If I don’t agree with him, it will provide the Jews with the excuse that, since they suffered a lot in the Second World War, it justifies what they are doing now. What I do know about for sure is the crimes of the Jews in Lebanon and the West Bank and Gaza.”
Word came that the Sheikh’s brother Jibril was going to visit. Through the window we could see a convoy led by an armored Land Cruise and a BMW sedan – the rewards of Fatah power – pulling up in front of the house. The Sheikh sighed. He did not seem entirely ready to greet his big brother. To cheer him up I asked him what else he did besides preach and teach the Koran.
“I am also the head of the Hebron Beekeepers Union,” he said.
I asked him if he got stung a lot.
The Sheikh rolled his eyes. “Don’t ask,” he said.

In the mid-nineteen-nineties, Jibril Rajoub, Marwan Barghouti, who led the Fatah militia, and Muhammad Dahlan, the head of security for the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip, were considered potential successors to “the Old Man” – Arafat. Unlike Jibril, his colleagues won seats in the new parliament, despite certain disadvantages: Barghouti is in jail serving five life sentences (plus forty years) for helping to kill four Israelis and a Greek monk; Dahlan is thought to have enriched himself and his extended family outrageously and illegally. Jibri, however, could not overcome the complexities of his history and his personality.
During the campaign, his reputation suffered not only because of his arrogance – the swaggering demeanor, the wealth he has allegedly acquired – but also because he had lost touch with his potential voters. Since returning to the West Bank from the P.L.O.’s exile in Tunis, he has lived and worked almost entirely in Jericho and Ramallah.
Khalid Amayreh, a journalist in Dura who writes for the Al Jazeera Web sit, told me, “Jibril is flamboyant, ostentatious, a self-inflated egomaniac with a sense of megalomania. His tongue often functions much more quickly than his mind. He is no intellectual. As they say, ‘Manchester born, Manchester bred, / Strong in the arm, weak in the head.” In his speeches he attacked his opponents hysterically and frantically, calling them all kinds of names. He said, ‘I was shooting Israelis when Sheikh Nayef was still playing with little kids.’ And he mocked Hamas. It was all a public-relations disaster.”
Mocking Hamas when Hamas has been able to build a reputation among Palestinians for grass-roots charity and incorruptibility was a dubious strategy for any Fatah candidate. In Palestinian eyes, Hamas had created a kind of shadow civil society long before it won a reputation for suicide bombings.
One morning, I visited the Islamic Charitable Society, in Hebron, a sprawling facility for several thousand children that includes schools, a medical clinic, and an orphanage. The director, a former marketing manager named Khalil Herbawi, said that the society was funded by various Western non-governmental organization, by Arab groups, and by private donors. Herbawi’s predecessor was in Hamas and had been arrested in 2002 for helping to finance and plan an attack on the nearby settlement of Adora. Herbawi said that he had voted for Hamas in the elections but added, “I am not in Hamas myself.” Last September, Israeli troops took over the society’s administrative building, confiscating documents, fax machines, printers, and computers and then sealing the doors as if it were a crime scene, an action that outraged Herbawi.
“The Israelis say that we take care of children whose parents martyred themselves,” Herbawi said. “But we take all the orphans, the ones whose parents are suicide bombers or who died of cancer or heart attacks… Of the thousand orphans here, only twenty or twenty-one are orphans because of suicide bombing. Another twenty or so are children of collaborators who were killed. So it even out.”
As we looked in on classrooms full of children learning math and science and then looked out from a balcony onto a playground filled with girls, all of them wearing the hijab, Herbawi said, “Is this terrorism? Maybe they will arrest me, too.”
Such institutions understandably helped make Hamas popular. Gaza and the West Bank are poor, and although in the past decade Western and Arab governments have poured billions of dollars into the accounts of the Palestinian Authority, most Palestinians believe that, thanks to the corruption of Fatah, they have been systematically robbed of much of that aid money. Western intelligence agencies believe that Hamas has used its social institutions for armed operations, indoctrinating children in schools, inciting violence and recruiting cells in mosques, establishing safe houses, and providing funds for weapons and for the families of fighters who have blown themselves up for the cause.
In 1998, Sheikh Yassin said that the political and social branches of Hamas could not be distinguished from the military. “We cannot separate the wing from the body,” he said, according to a report by Reuters. “If we do so, the body will not be able to fly. Hamas is one body.”

In most Palestinian cities and towns, the elections were so consuming that for weeks campaign placards replaced the usual posters of young men and women hoisting AK-47 rifles in their last moments alive. Democracy obscured the cult of martyrdom. Fatah outspent Hamas and the smaller parties, and the Bush Administration funnelled nearly two million dollars through U.S.A.I.D. funding projects in the occupied territories that it hoped would help Fatah’s election chances.
Hamas did manage to hire Nashat Aqtash, a professor of media studies at Bir Zeit University, to advise them on public relations. Aqtash told me when I visited him in Ramallah that his job was not as difficult as it seemed to outsiders. “For you, Hamas is suicide bombing and that’s it,” he said. “But suicide bombing is only a small fraction of what Hamas is for the Palestinian people.” Hamas, he insisted, was “all pluses, no minuses.” Its image of distributing charity and having borne the brunt of the Al Aqsa intifada and, by contrast, Fatah’s almost surreal disorganization was just part of the story. The American contributions backfired. “The Palestinians are stubborn and don't want to be told what to do, least of all by the United States of America,” he said.
Hamas ran three television commercials in the last week of the campaign, and none of them called on the familiar imagery of teen-age martyrs and declarations of jihad. Aqtash showed me the ads on his computer screen. One ad alternated images of Palestinian children suffering at the hands of Israeli soldiers and the words “Our blood” – in red – “is a fence to protect our holy places.” Very soft-soap by Hamas standards. Another featured Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas’s lead candidate on the national slate, who is expected to be named Prime Minister. “We will protect the resistance movement until we gain back all the occupied territories,” Haniyeh said, speaking almost in a whisper.
Aqtash had counselled Hamas candidates not to talk about killing Israelis and to limit their speeches about taking back all of historical Palestine. “You see,” he said proudly, “it is clear that he means the territories occupied in 1967, only crazy people talk about going beyond the 1967 borders.”
If a Hamas-led government was going to attract funds from abroad for the Palestinians, I asked, what was its next public-relations strategy?
Aqtash smiled and reminded me that his contract had run out on Election Day; nevertheless, he offered some final words of advice. “Our rhetoric was ineffective because we used Islamic rhetoric that is understandable to us but incomprehensible, and scary, to you,” he said. “At funerals, you would see masked people carrying rifles. In Gaza, this is a cultural thing, trying to show our grief and support to the families. But these images in the West mean ‘We will kill you.’ We need to organize the Palestinian message to the West and put it in a context that the West can understand. Israelis kill Palestinians, but they also have the talent to explain themselves.”

Stout, smiling through a scowl, and sitting in his chair with one arm slung over his seatback like a sultan, Jibril Rajoub instantly became the focal point of his younger brother’s living room. A boy appeared balancing a tray holding many glasses of tea. Jibril was served first. Sheikh Nayef began to work his worry beads at a fantastic clip while Jibril talked about devoting himself to the revival of Fatah and trying to coexist with Hamas as a matter of familial duty.
“Having a brother in Hamas is O.K., and I am proud of him,” he said. “Sheikh Nayef is a moderate, he’s realistic, a pragmatist. He was never an extremist. Politically, in the nineties, there were two different strategies. We in Fatah saw certain things as the rules of the game where negotiations were concerned. But in the past five years the Israelis stopped dealing with the Palestinian Authority as a partner, and the gap between the two Palestinian factions grew smaller… We’ll remain in the opposition as an honest partner, and we won’t try to undermine Hamas’s authority. We wish them success.”
Jibril had imprisoned many Hamas activists in his time, but now he acted the part of the defeated opponent graciously offering advice to his successors. “Most people in Hamas are realistic,” he said. “I don’t think anything will take place on a social level – like forcing women to wear the hijab. Hamas has to focus on international legitimacy and assure the international community that an Islamic leadership will contribute to regional stability.”
A couple of days later, I visited Jibril at his office in Ramallah. During the Al Aqsa intifada, the Israelis shelled the building, but now it was repaired and filled with aides gossiping about Jibril’s future and the coming of Hamas. Jibril gave me a copy of his “autobiography” – a book-length series of interviews about his years in Israeli prisons, his ascension to Arafat’s circle, and his contact with Israeli and American intelligence. The book featured photographs of him as a young man in Israeli custody and also ones of him- older, heavier – with George Tenet, Nelson Mandela, and Israeli officials. Jibril knew that such relationships, a remnant of the Oslo years, were part of what killed his election chances.
“There are all kinds of stories about how close I was to the Americans, the C.I.A., and all the rest,” Jibril said bitterly. “But how close? When I had cancer in 2002, after I left Preventive Security, I was treated first in Egypt, and they urged me to go to the Mayo Clinic, in Minnesota. But I was refused an American visa.” He went to England instead. “I never once talked with the Israelis without a green light from Abu Amar,” he went on, using Arafat’s nom de Guerre. “And after I met with the Israelis I always reported straight to him.”
Jibril had been at Arafat’s side, but it had always been a prickly relationship. In Tunis, according to Matt Rees’s book “Cain’s Field,” Rajoub once refused Arafat’s request to drive his future wife, Suha Tawil, to the airport on the ground that he would not “chauffeur a whore.” In May, 2002, Arafat fired Jibril as the head of Preventive Security after the Israelis demanded that the various Palestinian security agencies be put under Rajoub’s control. A month earlier, Israel had attacked Jibril’s compound. Jibril and his men had been allowed to escape, but only after giving up the Islamist prisoners in their custody. In 2003, Arafat brought Jibril back into Palestinian leadership, appointing him national-security adviser. “Our relationship had its ups and downs, which happens in any relationship that goes on for many years,” Jibril said. “At a certain point, Arafat felt that I was a threat to his regime, but I was always loyal to him. He was always the symbol of the Palestinian people and contributed to the cause more than anyone else.”
After Arafat died, in November, 2004, and his heir in Fatah, Mahmoud Abbas, won election as President of the Palestinian Authority, Hamas had an easier time portraying itself as the incorruptible champion of the resistance and Fatah as a spent force. Among his doubters, Abbas is considered timid, indecisive, and incapable of extracting anything from the Israelis. Jibril fought with Arafat over many issues, but he said, “If Arafat were still alive, Hamas would never have won. Arafat’s loss was a loss for everyone and in every way. He was the only Palestinian leader truly committed to the reconciliation of two peoples. He had the long view.”
If Arafat had such a long view, I asked, why did he turn down a deal at Camp David in 2000 that, for all its deficiencies, would have been a far better arrangement than anything contemplated by the Israelis today? Sheikh Nayef had told me that Camp David would have been an “unacceptable betrayal.” His brother did not answer directly, but it was clear that his opinion was not the same. “Excuse me! Why ask this question?” he said. “The Israelis talk of unilateralism now. Camp David is long over. There’s no use crying over spilled milk.”

The Israelis have begun an election campaign of their own, to choose a successor to Ariel Sharon, who has been in a coma since early January, when he suffered a stroke. And even though they are well aware that Sharon’s unilateral withdrawal from Gaza last year has been interpreted by Hamas as a credit to armed resistance, all polls show that the Kadima Party, led by Olmert, Sharon’s deputy prime minister, will win. Olmert gave an interview to Israel’s Channel 2 making it plain that, like Sharon, he planned to close dozens of smaller settlements on the West Bank but retain the main blocs of Ariel, Gush Etzion, and Ma’ale Adumim. He said that he would also retain “control” of the Jordan Valley and sovereignty over all of Jerusalem. This is less than what Ehud Barak and Bill Clinton proposed to Arafat five years ago, and it came as no surprise that the Hamas leadership dignified Omert’s offer only with mockery. In Cairo, Musa Abu-Marzuq, who once led the Hamas political bureau from northern Virginia, said, “When we restore historical Palestine, the Jews can come live with us. They will then acquire the Palestinian nationality.”
In early February, while the Hamas leadership made plans for a new government, the security situation deteriorated. Gaza was turning into a lawless state, with Palestinian militias launching Qassam rockets into Israeli territory and the Israeli Army killing militants, mainly from the air. In Hebron, local Islamists assaulted the headquarters of a European observer team; a dozen Danes on the team had to be escorted out of Hebron by the Israeli Army – precisely the soldiers they had been sent to observe. The same week, the Israelis arrested a group of religious militants who “identify with Hamas” and charged them with killing six Jews in the past year. In Israel, there was no sense that the rise of Hamas could be dismissed simply as a protest vote. Even a liberal scholar like Emmanuel Sivan, an expert in fundamentalism who has met Sheikh Yassin and other Hamas representatives over the years, told me, “If you are living in Israel it is always good to be anxious. We are a state living on edge.” He did say, however, that “the typical American-Jewish oy-vey reaction” was not warranted.
“An Arab friend told me, ‘Fatah is the crime and Hamas is the punishment,’” Sivan said. “Three-quarters of the Palestinians want a long-term arrangement with Israel and understand they have got only so far with violence, but they also want the rascals out.” The biggest danger facing Israel, he said, was that anarchy would begin to prevail, with uncontrolled militias and criminal gangs causing such a state of unrest that elements from Al Qaeda could exploit the situation and make their way to Gaza and the West Bank.
The Israeli security establishment is particularly worried about the relationship between Hamas and the Islamic regime in Tehran. “I am concerned about Iran’s efforts to engulf Israel with Islamist fundamentalist terror groups on the border: with Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, and with Hamas in Gaza and the West Bank,” Yuval Steinitz, the chairman of the Defense and Foreign Affairs committee in the Knesset, told me. “If Hamas takes control of the Palestinian armed forced and police, that means it will establish an armed threat right near Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Ben Gurion airport.” Avi Dichter, who recently stepped down as the head of Shin Bet, the Israeli F.B.I., and is now running for a seat in the Knesset, said that while the Israeli military had killed, arrested, or detained dozens of Hamas fighters and leaders during the Al Aqsa intifada, support from Iran, and the new ability to operate in Gaza with less Israeli interference, means that the militias remain a threat. In addition, Fatah’s own battalions, which adopted suicide bombing as a tactic in order to keep up with Hamas in the race for street credibility, have not disbanded, despite repeated statements from Abbas decrying violence.
For all the anxiety about Hamas, there remains in Israeli society a broad consensus for a two-state solution – a desire born less of an Oslo-era optimism about an integrated “new Middle East” and more of sheer weariness with occupation and an understanding that to retain the territories is to risk the Zionist idea of maintaining a Jewish majority in a democratic state.
“I don’t see any chance of reaching an agreement that you would call real peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians,” Shlomo Gazit, a retired, dovish Army general who used to command the West Bank and Gaza, told me. “This is not in the stars for the next hundred years. The Arab world does not accept a foreign people, a foreign religion, in the Middle East. All we can strive for is practical coexistence.”
“There is no resolution to this conflict,” Yehoshua Porath, a scholar of Middle Eastern history, says. “It is like a person living with a chronic disease for which there is no cure. You take palliatives and partial remedies. You know there is no final cure yet, but you keep investing in the search. Here the final cure is a peace settlement.”

In Gaza and the West Bank, the politicians, academics, and activists who were shocked by the Hamas victory have also searched for ways to soften the blow. The most common argument is that Hamas did not win many more votes than Fatah; it took fifty-six percent of the seats but with only forty-four percent of the vote. Part of the reason for the landslide is that Fatah ran an inept campaign, often putting forward more than one candidate against a single Hamas candidate, and splitting the vote. Hamas was also the beneficiary of a collective protest against the Palestinian Authority’s inability to cope with Sharon and Olmert, and the indignity of occupation. But the idea that Hamas will modify its ideology because it is now faced with the prospect of making good on its promises, of creating jobs and collecting the garbage, of day-to-day governing, does not impress many Palestinian analysts. In Iran, after all, Ahmadinejad came to power not because of his insistence on building a nuclear weapon or his anti-Semitic rhetoric; he, too, won popularity largely on social issues.
Ghassan Khatib, the Palestinian Authority’s minister of planning, told me that the Fatah hierarchy is worried that there is a direct relationship between poverty and radical fundamentalism, and if the situation in the territories worsens an even more radical Hamas will take hold.
“The Muslim Brotherhood believes that it is possible to reestablish the Islamic regimes in the Islamic world and reach the point of a single Islamic superpower, as in the old days,” Khatib said. “It wants to be a huge modern state and compete with the modern superpowers. But it’s a fantasy. You cannot govern by Islam. Islamic ideology is not suitable for that. It has fixed ideas on economics and government that are inflexible and irrelevant for modern time.
“Hamas can moderate in the tactical sense, but not fundamentally. It will play tactics on the question of violence and in its political slogans. What it wants is the freedom to maneuver, to build people into ‘real and proper Muslims,’ to keep building its base… This is very dangerous for the Palestinians, and they should think about ending this Hamas majority. The Israelis need to take the opportunity to negotiate with Abbas and the peace camp. There are three years until the next Presidential elections. This is the historical window of opportunity. If Hamas wins the Presidency, that will be the end of it.”
For the moment, Abbas does have greater power than the legislature. But Hamas has every intention of continuing to play what its leaders call “the democracy game” and winning it outright. One night in Hebron, I dropped by the Hamas headquarters to see Aziz al-Dweik, who will be joining the legislature next month as speaker of parliament.
When he was a young man, Dweik studied in Jordan and then earned a doctorate in urban and regional planning at the University of Pennsylvania. The geography of his life has been varied: he spent eight years in Philadelphia, one year in southern Lebanon with his fellow-Islamists in force exile, and four in an Israeli prison.
When Dweik returned to Hebron in 1988, he said, “I spoke my mind just as I did in the mosque at the University of Pennsylvania.” The Israelis did not appreciate it, jailing him several times for incitement and for membership in Hamas, which had been outlawed by Israel.
I mentioned that the Jerusalem Post had published a Hamas poster from the Al Aqsa intifada period that yoked together portraits of Sheikh Yassin, Shamil Basayev, a Chechen rebel leader, and Osama bin Laden. If Hamas was going to present itself as a rational political group, I said, why was it linking itself to Al Qaeda?
“Bin Laden is a fighter for the cause of Islam, and this man has his way of serving his God,” Dweik said. “He has offered the West a truce many time, saying that he will put down his arms if the West stops interfering in our affairs. We have no right to hate bin Laden. We respect him. Hiding this fact does not serve the truth.”
This was the most arresting aspect of the Hamas leaders; their thinking – their charter, their goals, short-range and long – was unconcealed and calmly provided. While diplomats and journalist sifted through the language looking for shades of meaning, Hamas was politely answering every question. Hamas is focussed primarily on the question of Palestine, of forming a government and resisting the Israeli occupation, but it also sees the election as part of a regional phenomenon, a historical tide, which, with time, not only would dislodge a few hundred settlers from Hebron but could cross borders into Egypt, Jordan, and beyond.
“Whenever and wherever people are given the choice, this is what happens,” Dweik said. “Secularism is an import. It’s not indigenous. Islam is a practical and idealistic way of life. Islam is the religion of God, which God has chosen for the guidance of mankind.
“Please stop asking us to recognize the occupier and not the needs of our own lives. This is slavery, slavery of a kind that did not even happen in Africa or in any other country! The Jews suffered the Holocaust, but it only happened for a short period of time. The Palestinians have been living a whole century in a holocaust… The truth is on our side. The Israelis have the illusion that truth is on their side, but the Koran is the last revelation. The Israelis in this city have to move somewhere else. They have to acknowledge the facts on the ground. The future is ours.“The situation with the Rajoub brother, well, you may call it the ongoing conflict between secularism and Islam. The big brother is a secularist and the younger is an Islamist. But the Islamist won in a democratic vote. The two brother gave you the shape of history – one has prevailed and the other will vanish.”
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