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Queen Rania of Jordan

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Rania Al-Abdullah
Queen consort of Jordan
Queen Rania at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos
Tenure7 February 1999–present
SpouseAbdullah II of Jordan
IssuePrince Hussein
Princess Iman
Princess Salma
Prince Hashem
HouseHashemite
FatherFaisal Sedki Al-Yassin
MotherIlham Yassin
ReligionPitiful Excuse for a Muslim

Queen Rania of Jordan (Template:Lang-ar) (born Rania Al-Yassin on 31 August 1970), is the wife of King Abdullah II of Jordan.

Biography

Early life

Rania Al-Yassin was born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents from Tulkarm. She attended primary and secondary school at New English School in Kuwait, then earned a degree in Business Administration from the American University in Cairo. After her graduation in 1991, Queen Rania worked at Citibank and Apple Computer in Amman, Jordan.[1]

Marriage and children

She met Jordanian King Abdullah bin Al-Hussein, then Prince, at a dinner party in January 1993. Two months later, they announced their engagement and on June 10, 1993, they were married. They have four children:

Queen of Jordan

Although her husband ascended on 7 February 1999, Rania did not become Queen immediately. She was proclaimed Queen of Jordan by her husband on 22 March 1999.[2] Without proclamation, she would have been a mere princess consort, just like her mother-in-law, Princess Muna al-Hussein.

Queen Rania has pushed for more rights for women and children in the region and in the world as a whole. She set up the Madrasati initiative aimed at renovating Jordan's most dilapidated public schools.

Queen Rania speaking to Columbia University president Lee Bollinger at the 2008 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland

Queen Rania has been an outspoken advocate of women's rights. She was awarded the honorary rank of colonel in the Jordanian Armed Forces by her husband, King Abdullah, on June 9, 2004.

She was named the third most beautiful woman in the world in the 2005 top 100 of Harpers & Queen magazine. In addition, she was the youngest queen in the world at the time King Abdullah succeeded to the throne. She has made many public appearances, including a half-hour television interview on The Oprah Winfrey Show on May 17, 2006, where she spoke about misconceptions about Islam and women's role in Islam.[3] In May 2000, she was named an honorary member of Deerfield Academy's class of 2000 (her husband's alma mater).

Queen Rania was ranked 81st in the Forbes 2005 100 most powerful women of the world list.[4]

Philanthropy

Queen Rania is renowned for her philanthropic work. She has pushed for education reform, fighting for better school facilities and mandatory English language training. She is also an enthusiastic supporter of the micro-fund movement which provides financial assistance to would-be entrepreneurs.[5] In 2003, she was elected to the Board of Directors of the International Criminal Court's Trust Fund for Victims.[6]

She has travelled to a great number of countries in representation of Jordan and to contribute to worldwide causes. Some of these are the United States, India, Kuwait, France, South Africa, Greece, The Netherlands, Great Britain, Morocco, Italy, The Vatican.

Queen Rania is involved with organizations including:

YouTube

On March 30 2008, she launched her own channel on YouTube with a video in which she asked people to send her their questions about Islam and the Arab world until August 12 2008 (International Youth Day). She provided responses to those questions and explained the truth about various Arab and Muslim stereotypes.[7][8]

She posted daily videos on subjects that included honor killings, terrorism and the rights of Arab women.[9] According to the AFP, over the five month conversation, her YouTube site had more than 3 million views. [10]

International personalities like Dean Obeidallah,[11] Maz Jobrani and Mia Rose all contributed to creating videos for the campaign.

The video sharing website decided to honor the Queen with the first ever YouTube Visionary Award at YouTube Live on November 22, 2008. The award was presented by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who said the Queen was being honored because of her "use of technology to instigate social change". The Queen accepted the award via taped message where she spoofed US comedian David Letterman by copying his Top 10 format in the humorous clip where she explained why she started her channel on YouTube. [12]. That video made reference to popular cultural icons such as Matt Harding from wherethehellismatt.com. She mentioned it in list #6, which led to launch of spoof website such as http://www.wherethehellishermajesty.com.

Queen Rania also was one of many leaders, entertainers, and activists to collaborate with Black Eyed Peas front man will.i.am where she appeared on a video on YouTube as part of YouTube's In My Name campaign.[13] The video, "End Poverty - Be the Generation," urges world leaders to keep the promises they made in 2000 at the United Nations Millennium Summit with the Millennium Development Goals, a set of time-bound and measurable goals for combating poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation and discrimination against women.

References

Queen Rania of Jordan
Born: 31 August 1970
Royal titles
Preceded by Queen consort of Jordan
22 March 1999 - present
Incumbent