How Hamas weaponises victimhood

12 months ago 46

The post How Hamas weaponises victimhood appeared first on Anglican Mainstream. by Frank Furedi, spiked: In 2023, we learned just how deadly identity politics can be. After Hamas’s brutal attack on Israel on 7 October, the speed with which...

The post How Hamas weaponises victimhood appeared first on Anglican Mainstream.

by Frank Furedi, spiked:

In 2023, we learned just how deadly identity politics can be.

After Hamas’s brutal attack on Israel on 7 October, the speed with which woke Westerners came out in support of the terrorists remains shocking to recall. Within a matter of hours, pundits, activists and academics flooded social media to claim that this anti-Semitic pogrom was a form of anti-colonial resistance. Within days, they were out on the streets of Western cities staging ‘pro-Palestine’ protests, letting off celebratory flares and chanting the genocidal chant, ‘From the river to the sea’. It showed that identitarian Westerners are willing to justify violence, no matter how brutal, so long as it is perpetrated by certain identity groups.

This embrace of Hamas by these Westerners is not an aberration, however. It follows from the logic of identity politics itself.

There are two main reasons why identity politics and support for Hamas go hand in hand. Firstly, identity politics has sacralised victimhood. That is, it attributes an enormous amount of moral authority to groups and individuals on the basis of their perceived victimisation. As Palestinians have been uniformly framed as victims over several decades, they have a tremendous amount of moral authority in identitarian eyes. Secondly, for the woke, victims are by definition blameless. They can neither be doubted nor held responsible for their actions. In the eyes of Western identitarians, Hamas, as the representative of a blameless victim group, is not to be held responsible for what it did on 7 October.

Strikingly, Hamas and other reactionary Islamist groups have themselves bought into the language of victimisation and identity politics. They increasingly frame their actions in therapeutic terms. They present themselves as the traumatised victims of assorted forms of oppression. As Ghazi Hamad, a leading figure in Hamas, put it last month: ‘We are the victims of the [Israeli] occupation. Period. Therefore, nobody should blame us for the things we do. On 7 October, 10 October, 1,000,000 October – everything we do is justified.’

For Hamad, then, Hamas’s atrocities are righteous, blameless acts. He justifies his group’s violence as an understandable response to victimisation, or ‘occupation’, at the hands of Israel – despite the fact that Israel withdrew from Gaza 18 years ago.

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Read also:  The unholy alliance between wokeism and barbarism by Brendan O’Neill

 

 

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