
Gazans are seeing Hamas for the murderers they are, only its Western fellow travellers remain blind
The uprisings are ongoing. They have spread south, even erupting in the Hamas stronghold of Jabalia in Gaza City, where a protest in 2019 was viciously repressed by the jihadis.
It is impossible to know whether they will be snuffed out by hastily recruited 16-year-olds with Kalashnikovs or if this is the start of something bigger. But the episode has already neatly revealed the deplorable hypocrisy at the heart of Gaza activism in Britain, seemingly more concerned with feeding a lust for the denigration of Israel than the welfare of the Palestinians.
I first learnt about the protests from my old friend in Gaza City, whom I know from my time as a foreign correspondent. He sent me a message on WhatsApp containing links to footage on Facebook. I was unable to open them. 'Try to please,' he implored. 'Important videos.'
He was desperate to get the word out because he and his comrades felt they were facing a media blackout. The irony was stark. The BBC falls over itself to blame Israel the minute civilians are killed, without waiting for the facts; yet risk your life to protest against Hamas and the prevarication is palpable. Here were real-life Palestinians making their voices heard in Gaza, only for journalists to stick their fingers in their ears because it disrupted the narrative they'd been peddling for the past, well, forever.
From one point of view, you'd have thought that the story would be widely covered. After all, isn't the BBC normally keen to make a distinction between the fanatics of Hamas and the innocent civilians of Gaza as soon as an Israeli bomb lands? The problem, however, is that what serves the narrative in one context can have the opposite effect in another.
The unpalatable truth is this: in the back of every liberal mind there lurks a guilty sympathy for Hamas. They have learnt not to say it out loud, but in a brain addled by centrist fundamentalism, decolonisation dogma and critical race theory, it is hard to resist the siren call to embrace the most savage jihadism simply because it fits.
The white man is the enemy. The imperialists are to blame. Colonialism is the worst evil ever to befall mankind and the underdog deserves solidarity, ergo resistance is justified. This is how they think.
Yasser Arafat's alignment with the decolonisation movement in the Sixties, in particular the Algerian defeat of the French, was a stroke of genius which won unquestioning solidarity from the Left. The delusion persists today.
The reality, of course, is that most Jews are not white. Israel is not a colonial power. The Palestinians have been offered a state on several occasions – including the 2008 Olmert proposal, which satisfied 100 per cent of their supposed demands – but turned down every one in favour of bloodshed.
Hamas is no different from Islamic State. 'Resistance' is simply code for the wanton rape, butchery and mutilation of families in their beds, motivated by fanatical religion (Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, for God's sake). But when you're wearing your BBC goggles, such subtle distinctions as these become cloudy. Pretty soon, you end up thinking Yahya Sinwar is Che Guevara.
Shamefully, this dogma continues to dominate on the Left today. You just can't shake them out of it. So we end up with patrician BBC journalists ignoring facts which don't match their dogmatic understanding of the world, as they don't want to confuse the public. We see activists in London, in their keffiyehs and crop-tops, tearing down hostage posters just as the weary people of Gaza take to the streets in defiance of their jihadi oppressors.
Resistance is justified, you say? Perhaps. So where's your solidarity for the Palestinian resistance against Hamas, who brought this nightmare on their heads in the first place?

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