The book has no references, was updated in 2010, author mentions it in intro right away. It is somewhat outdated, but it does helps establish the background of the movement from an unbiased perspective.
Its written in a QnA form, each chapter is a Question. And within it are sub-questions.
The author uses terminology and dichotomy of a secularist, that is, from start on, he separates religion/politics, which can be understandable if the book is written for a western/non-muslim audience.
Because islam is definitely not a subject to be limited in a single sphere of life.
And it is the only organisation which is succeeding.
According to book:
Hamas is an adjunct organisation birthed in 1987 with a specific mission of confronting the occupation.
It’s a smaller, specific, sophisticated, definite part of a larger movement.
It is only anti-Zionist.
Its pragmatism is definitely something worth taking lessons from. It doesn’t budge from its principles.
There were other Secular and Communist movements working before inception of Hamas, in 1940-1970s. But they went terribly wrong, drenched in corruption, became docile when they initiated to recognise Israel.
But in 2006, for sake of pragmatism, Hamas joined elections(proposed by Oslo Accords, that is, by Israel) to have legitimate say in legislation, and it unanimously won by 60% of votes in whole of post-1967 Palestine, that is Gaza & West Bank. Even they weren’t expecting such a victory.
The victory was an immediate superficial-hoax-threat for the secular Palestinians, and a definite threat for Occupation.
It backfired onto West. And West went berserk, they refused to accept results of their own placed democracy. And imposed heavy sanctions. Blocking all aid, just like they did now in Afghanistan in 2021.
***Ben Bot, the Dutch foreign minister, voiced the justification of this move when he said, 'The Palestinian people have opted for this government, so they will have to bear the consequences.***
***Hamas leaders point to the Arab Summit Peace Initiative adopted in Beirut in 2002, which offered Israel full and collective Arab recognition and normalization of relations in return for accepting the two-state solution according to UN resolutions. Their point is that when Israel refuses such a collective Arab recognition, how and why would Hamas's recognition of Israel change Israel's attitudes and positions?***
It’s inspiring to read that all the Hamas’s top leadership, has grown up in refugee camps, and they still live among, and like the ordinary Palestinians, unlike the secularists.
This gains Hamas much popularity and support from Palestinians.
It’s an organisation still standing firm, persevering, even after betrayals and immediate-losses.
It will rise.
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After reading the book, Do I condemn them?
NO!