How many heyday communist leaders would've accused Hasan of being a jewish plant to undermine the revolution, I wonder
He wouldn't have even qualified as petite bourgeoisie, which typically composed of the middle class and/or small business owners and did
eventually participate in the revolution once the proletariat got it started.
"The lower middle class, the small manufacturer, the shopkeeper, the artisan, the peasant, all these fight against the bourgeoisie to save from extinction their existence." — The Communist Manifesto
And Marx had more respect for the landed aristocracy than he did the Lumpenproletariat, since self-interest was at least enough to slow the advance of capitalism.
"In Russia, the nobility does more to resist the encroachment of capital than the so-called democrats in the West." — Letter to Engels
So Lumpenproletariat it is.
The name for that class wasn't in the Communist Manifesto, it was an essay after: "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte" is
cope an explanation by Marx on how/why the French people
voted against their own interests (sound familiar?) in a referendum and gave Charles N Bonaparte to the right to become emperor; Marx attributed it to the freshly named Lumpenproletariat — the lowest of the low of society who were easily susceptible to bribes, contributing no value to society even with labour — as the cause alongside a power vacuum. He also really did not want to attribute it to the intelligence of Napoleon III, arguing he just got lucky essentially, carried to the position by inertia and conflicts between the lower classes. It's really easy to draw parallels between Marx seething about this event and what you see today with Trump, but I digress.
A heydey communist would've likely
used Hasan as cannon fodder against opposing forces, and if he somehow survived, they would've shot him before he got the chance to betray the the revolution, which Lumpenproles were apparently always itching to do if it meant serving their own direct interests. Under Pol Pot's regime they've killed him for wearing glasses; that would be the only time in history where Hasan would've been considered an intellectual by someone other than his audience.