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Queen continues to advocate for education, coexistence

By JT - Aug 30,2015 - Last updated at Aug 31,2015

Her Majesty Queen Rania tours the Jordan River Foundation’s 19th annual handicrafts exhibition on October 28, 2014 (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — Monday marks Her Majesty Queen Rania’s birthday. 

Over the past year, the Queen, an outspoken advocate for education in Jordan and around the world, and a promoter of peace and coexistence, continued to reach out with a message of understanding and tolerance across the world and media platforms, according to a statement from her office.

At the Abu Dhabi Media Summit in November of 2014, Queen Rania spoke out on behalf of Islam and the Arab world, addressing more than 500 leaders in the media industry from around the globe. 

Her speech carried a clear message: The Arab world must reclaim its narrative from extremist groups in the region.

“A minority of irreligious extremists is using social media to rewrite our narrative… hijack our identity and rebrand us.”

With images of violence and destruction from the Arab world projected on a screen behind her, Her Majesty insisted that these images do not represent the vast majority of Arabs and Muslims. 

She urged industry leaders and individuals from the across the region to rewrite the narrative by speaking up about who we are and what we stand for: instead of hate, tolerance, and instead of destruction, to emphasise a region rich in potential, individuality and ambition.

“We can spend our lives letting others dictate our narrative… and cast ourselves as the victims. Or we can realise the truth: that we are the creators of our own story. For the sake of each one of us…for Islam and the Arab world… for the future of our young people.”

2015 was a year of mourning for Jordan over the death of air force pilot Captain Muath Kasasbeh, who was killed by the Daesh terror group. 

To honour his memory, Queen Rania joined thousands of Jordanians in downtown Amman after Friday noon prayers in a communal unity march to honour his memory.

Speaking briefly to the BBC during the march, Her Majesty insisted that Jordanians were united, not only in their grief, but in their rejection of extremism. 

“Today I am just like every other Jordanian. We’re all united in our horror, in our grief, in what we saw. Through their heinous acts, I think they’re trying to frighten Jordanians, but all they did is make us angry and united, and very determined to rid this world of this evil… This is not Islam; we have to reclaim our religion from these people.”

Earlier this year, during a special Q&A session in London with Arianna Huffington, editor in chief of The Huffington Post, Queen Rania reaffirmed that there is nothing Islamic about the self-proclaimed “Islamic State”.

“They have nothing to do with faith and everything to do with fanaticism… What the extremists want is to divide our world along fault lines of religion and culture.”

Her Majesty also utilised her global reach to advocate for young people, in Jordan and across the Arab world.

Earlier this year, the Queen, a member of the UN chief’s high-level advisory panel on the Post-2015 Development Agenda, also joined fellow members along with several high-profile activists in addressing a letter to world leaders, urging them to create positive change in the world in order to secure a better and safer future for all.

In addition to all this, she has been an outspoken advocate for children’s rights. Following this year’s tragedies, she spoke out against the targeting of children, including the Yemeni school bus attack and an attack in Pakistan that took the lives of 132 children, as well as Nigeria’s kidnapped girls.

On December 17, 2014, Her Majesty condemned these attacks in an op-ed for the Huffington Post titled “Extremism’s Innocent Victims: Children and Islam”. 

“These atrocities are difficult for us to process; they’re simply incomprehensible. I don’t have answers; I only have questions. When did children become legitimate targets for radicals? When did global human rights treaties designed to protect children cease to matter? When did a child’s safe return from school each day become something to celebrate? And until when will children pay the price of extremism?”

In another op-ed  — “What Good Is Technological Progress without Moral Progress?” — Her Majesty discussed the juxtaposition of large strides in technological advancement with global moral downfall. 

She talked about the flat value of technological progress if it cannot be enjoyed by everyone in the world.

“Somewhere in our fast-paced world, crammed full of the latest gadgets, the alleged hallmarks of ‘progress’, too many people have forgotten the values on which our global family is built,” the Queen wrote.

At home, Her Majesty continued to oversee and support education efforts in Jordan, from school renovations, the development of healthier schools, and better teacher training, to learning outcomes in general. 

This year, she inaugurated the Teachers Skills Forum, which aims to address the most pressing needs of the educational sector in the Arab world.

Her Majesty stressed that teachers are at the heart of the educational process, and that investing in them and their training is a top priority. 

Addressing teachers at the forum, she said, “You need to constantly broaden your knowledge, adopt new techniques that are better suited for this day and age, and be fully aware of what influences your students.”

On a more personal note, throughout the past year, Her Majesty shared several insights into her personal and family life through social media platforms.

Commenting on her use of social media in an interview with Mashable this March, the Queen mentioned social media’s power to connect people across borders.

 

“I hope to reach people who care about change, people who are not afraid to step out of the comfort of the familiar who want to see and strengthen the universal threads and common experiences that connect us — irrespective of age or geography.”

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