Rania Yasin was born on August 31, 1970,
in Kuwait to Palestinian parents. A doctor’s daughter, she grew up in a
comfortable home on the West Bank alongside her two siblings. She
received a thoroughly Western education, first at the New English School
in Kuwait City and then at the American University in Cairo, where she
graduated with a business degree. In 1991 she moved to Amman, where her
parents had settled after fleeing Kuwait along with hundreds of
thousands of other Palestinians following the 1991 Gulf War. After a
brief stint with international company Citibank, Rania took on a
marketing position with Apple Computers. Then, a chance outing with a
new co-worker to a dinner party hosted by Prince Abdullah’s sister in
January 1993 changed Rania’s life forever.
It was there that the future queen first laid eyes on her prince.
When their eyes met across the room, it was love at first sight and they
were married just five months later.Rania never expected to be queen,
however. Although Abdullah II was the late King Hussein’s eldest son,
his father changed the line of succession in favour of Abdullah’s uncle
when the boy was just three years old. On his deathbed in 1999, however,
King Hussein unexpectedly named his son his successor. Despite the
unexpected change in her circumstances, the young queen has taken to her
role and is now known as much for her progressive social and economic
agenda as for her supermodel good looks. She has promoted the creation
of child abuse counselling centres “There wasn’t even terminology for
child abuse when I got involved,” she says and fought to end the
controversial “honour killings”, murders committed by men punishing
sisters or daughters who have “dishonoured” their family, often by
violating social traditions.
The Queen Rania currently heads the Higher National
Committee of the Declaration of Amman the Arab Cultural Capital 2002.
She heads the Higher National Committee of the Jordan Song Festival, and
also annually lends her patronage to the Jordanian Festival for the
Arab Child Song. In tribute to His Majesty the Late King Hussein, and on
the first anniversary of his passing away, Queen Rania produced ?The
King?s Gift?–a children?s book about the Late King. Proceeds of the book
go to the benefit of underprivileged children across Jordan.
She is also Honorary President of the Arab Academy for Banking and
Financial Sciences (AABFS), a pioneering institute in the region
offering technical and academic training in banking and financial
services. And is also Honorary President of the Arab Women Labor Affairs
Committee of the Arab Labor Organization. She is President of the
Jordan Society for Organ Donation and the Jordan Cancer Society. On July
12, 2001, Queen Rania was awarded an Honorary Doctor
of Laws (LLD) degree from the University of Exeter in the United
Kingdom. She is fluent in Arabic and English, and has a working
knowledge of French. . She also makes sure there is plenty of quality
time with her four children: Prince Hussein, Princess Iman, Princess
Salma and Prince Hashem. “I make it a point and find comfort in tucking
them into bed at night, reading them their favourite bedtime stories and
reciting verses from the Koran to them as they sleep,” says this true
woman of the new millennium.
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