

A History of Hamas
34 snips Oct 9, 2025
Martin Keir, a lecturer at the University of Sydney and author on Hamas, and Khalid El-Gindi, an expert on Palestinian affairs, dive deep into the origins and evolution of Hamas. They discuss how grassroots protests during the First Intifada fueled its emergence and the defining aims in its 1988 charter. The conversation highlights Hamas's identity as an Islamist movement, the impact of historical events on its formation, and the shifting dynamics of Israeli-Palestinian relations over the decades.
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Origins In Gaza And The Brotherhood
- Hamas formed in 1987 as an Islamist movement rooted in the Muslim Brotherhood and Gaza social networks.
- It framed liberation as achievable only through Islamic principles and resistance rather than diplomacy.
Charter Versus Practice
- The 1988 Hamas charter framed armed jihad and rejection of negotiation as central tactics.
- Yet Martin Keir notes the charter was insular and later rarely invoked by Hamas leadership.
Yassin's Social Center Became Hamas
- Sheikh Ahmed Yassin built al-Mujama al-Islami as a Gaza social welfare center that later evolved into Hamas.
- Israel initially licensed the Islamic Center, which later became a base for organized resistance activities.