Prince Hassan bin Talal
Prince Hassan bin Talal is a member of the Jordanian royal family who was previously Crown Prince from 1965 to 1999, being removed just three weeks before King Hussein's death.
Family
Prince Hassan is the third son of King Talal and Queen Zein, brother of King Hussein and uncle of King Abdullah II.In 1968, Prince El Hassan married Sarvath Ikramullah, daughter of the politician and diplomat Mohammed Ikramullah, and female politician, diplomat and Urdu author, Begum Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah. Both her parents, from prominent Bengali families, were born in then British India. They first met in London in 1958, when they were both youngsters, and have four children together:
Prince Hassan was educated first in Amman. He then attended Sandroyd School in Wiltshire before going on to Summer Fields School, Oxford, followed by Harrow School in England, then Christ Church, a college of the University of Oxford, where he graduated BA with Honours in Oriental Studies and later proceeded to MA. Hassan is fluent in Arabic, English, French and German. He has a working knowledge of Turkish and Spanish, and studied Hebrew at university.
Career
In 1965 Hassan was named as Crown Prince of Jordan after the constitution was amended. He was frequently regent during his brother's absences from the country. During Hussein's final illness in January 1999, he was replaced by his nephew Abdullah only days before the king died. Abdullah subsequently inherited the throne of Jordan.In 2009, he joined the project "Soldiers of Peace", a film against all wars and for global peace.
On 10 June 2013, he was appointed as the chairman of the advisory board on water and sanitation by the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
Removal as Crown Prince
As King Hussein was undergoing cancer treatment in mid-1998, the King assigned Crown Prince Hassan a range of powers and authority to act as regent. With his newly gained powers, Hassan exercised a number of steps to consolidate his position as heir and future king, which included: "orchestrating the removal of the government" of Abdelsalam Majali and appointing former Royal Court chief Fayez al-Tarawneh in his place, organizing dialogue and reconciliation with opposition groups, most prominently the Muslim Brotherhood, and "attempting to affect changes at top of the military". Hassan's attempted changes of the top hierarchy of the military angered King Hussein and led him to resume full duties as king. It is also a commonly cited reason for Hassan's removal as crown prince on January 24, 1999. Hassan's removal took shape through a 14-page typed letter, described by American historian W. Andrew Terrill as "extremely harsh", in which King Hussein expressed "unmistakable disappointment in Crown Prince Hassan" and ordered his replacement with Hussein's son Abdullah. Terrill describes King Hussein as perhaps having felt that Hassan had "interest in shifting the line of succession to his own family", which led to his dismissal as Crown Prince three weeks before Hussein's death.Crown Prince Hassan's attempted consolidation of power led the sickly King Hussein to "break off intensive treatments for lymphoma" and fly back home to Jordan in order to address this issue. At first, the King attempted to negotiate with Hassan, placing the King's younger son Hamzah as Hassan's crown prince to ensure that the line of succession would not switch to Hassan's line. However, Hassan's Indian-born wife Sarvath vetoed the proposal, particularly because of her reported distaste for Hamzah's American-born mother Queen Noor and her desire to have her son Prince Rashid in the line of succession. Therefore instead, King Hussein replaced Hassan with his own son Abdullah who had backing within the military and whose position as eldest son of the king would allow him to be "enthroned by royal fiat", unlike Hamzah whose enthronement would require "confirmation from the Jordanian Parliament".
Organizations
Prince Hassan has been a very active participant in Jordanian and International civil society. He founded the Royal Scientific Society in 1970, the Annual Bilad Al-Sham Conference in 1978, and the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought in 1980. He has also established the Al al-Bayt University in Mafraq, the Hashemite Aid and Relief Agency, the Islamic Scientific Academy, the Triannual Conferences on the History and Archaeology of Jordan, the Amman Baccalaureate School, and the Al-Hassan Youth Award. He founded and chairs the Independent Bureau for Humanitarian Issues, Independent Commission on International Humanitarian Issues, the Higher Council for Science and Technology, the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies, the Foundation for Intercultural and Interfaith Research and Dialogue, the Arab Thought Forum since 1981, the Kawakibi Democracy Transition Center, and the West Asia – North Africa Forum, and was chair of the Policy Advisory Commission for the World Intellectual Property Organization from 1999–2002.He has served as the president of the Club of Rome from 1999 to 2007, the board of directors for the Center for Peace Studies and Conflict Resolution at the University of Oklahoma, the Parliament of Cultures, the Royal Jordanian Polo Club, and the International Tolerance Foundation for Humanities and Social Studies, and is honorary president of the Euro-Mediterranean Association for Cooperation and Development since 2012.
Prince Hassan is also a patron of the Post-War Reconstruction and Development Unit at the University of York, the Swiss Rights and Humanity non-profit organization, the British Institute in Amman, and the Woolf Institute, in addition to being a member of the Global Leadership Foundation, the Chairman the United Nations Secretary-General's Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, the Advisory Board of British think tank Gold Mercury International, the board of directors of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, the Board of Trustees of the Foundation for Interreligious and Intercultural Research and Dialogue at University of Geneva, Switzerland, the Executive Committee of the International Crisis Group, the International Advisory Board of Forum 2000, the Committee of Personalities of Institut Catala De La Mediterrania, the Informal Advisory Group to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor, the International Board of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Board of World Religious Leaders for the Elijah Interfaith Institute, the Trilateral Commission, the Advisory Council for Research of the Center for Democracy and Community Development, and the Independent Eminent Experts group of the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Related Intolerance.
Titles, styles, honours and awards
Titles and styles
- 20 March 1947 – 1 March 1965: His Royal Highness Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan
- 1 March 1965 – 24 January 1999: His Royal Highness Crown Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan
- 24 January 1999 – present: His Royal Highness Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan
Honours
National honours
- : Honorary Knight Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of al-Hussein bin Ali
- : Knight Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Renaissance, Special Class
- : Knight of the Decoration of the Star of the Hashemites
Foreign honours
- : Grand Cross of the Order of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria, 1st Class
- Ethiopian Imperial Family: Knight Grand Cordon of the Imperial Order of the Queen of Sheba
- : Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary
- : Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
- : Knight Grand Cordon of the Order of the Defender of the Realm
- : First Class of the Order of Intellectual Merit
- : Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau
- : Recipient of the King Willem-Alexander Inauguration Medal
- : Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav
- : Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland
- : Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III
- : Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Polar Star
- : Recipient of the 70th Birthday Medal of King Carl XVI Gustaf
- : Order of Propitious Clouds with Special Grand Cordon
- : Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
Honorary degrees and doctorates
- Honorary Degree of Science, Boğaziçi University, Turkey
- Honorary Degree of Doctor of Civil Law, Durham University, U.K.
- Honorary Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies, U.S.A.
- Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland
- Honorary Doctorate, Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Russia
- Honorary Doctorate of Laws, University of Birmingham, U.K.
- Honorary Doctorate, Bilkent University, Turkey
- Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws, University of Hertfordshire, U.K.
- Honorary Doctorate of Theology, University of Tübingen, Germany
- Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters, University of Oklahoma, U.S.A.
- Honorary Doctorate, University of York, U.K.
- Honorary Doctorate of Laws, University of Portsmouth, U.K.
- Honorary Doctorate of Laws, International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan
- Honorary Degree of LLD Honoris Causa, School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, U.K.
- Honorary Degree and the Medal of the World Academy, Old Dominion University, U.S.A.
- Doctorate Honoris Causa, Universidade Cândido Mendes, Brazil
- Doctorate Honoris Causa, Institute of Higher Education of Brasilia, Brazil
- Doctorate Honoris Causa, Faculdades Metropolitanas Unidas, Brazil
- Honorary Degree in Human Letters, Brandeis University, U.S.A.
- Honorary Degree, Soka University, Japan
- Honorary Doctorate, the Faculty of Humanities, University of Lund, Sweden.
- Doctorate Honoris Causa Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary.
- Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Doctorate Honoris Causa in Multicultural Communication For Human And Nations Development, Hasanuddin University, Indonesia, 2012
Awards and prizes
- The Four Freedoms Award – May 2014
- The Abu Bakr Al-Siddique Medal of the Organisation of Arab Red Crescent and Red Cross Societies – September 1996.
- The 1995 Science and Society Prize in Madrid.
- The inaugural Gandhi/King/Ikeda Community Builders Medal and Torch of Nonviolence – April 2001.
- The Distinguished Foreign Visitor Award at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston – April 2002.
- The 2003 Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum Award for the Advancement of Inter-religious Understanding – June 2003.
- The Abraham Fund Pioneer of Co-existence Award – January 2004.
- The 2005 Eternal Flame Award by the Annual Scholars’ Conference of the U.S.
- The Calgary Peace Prize – 2007.
- A medal to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the adoption of UNESCO's Constitution, at the inaugural meeting of the Tolerance Foundation held at the Yusupov Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia – May 2007.
- The 2008 Abraham Geiger Award for Peace.
- The Niwano Peace Prize in Japan – May 2008.
- The Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani medallion – Iqbal Academy, UK – 2008.
- The Peace Prize of the City of Augsburg – Germany – 2008.
Abraham Geiger Award
"Honouring the President Emeritus of the World Conference of Religions for Peace underlines Prince Hassan's courage in defending pluralism, promoting understanding among different cultures and enhancing dialogue between Jews, Muslims and Christians. The Prince's efforts to promote understanding between the Islamic and Western Worlds are crucial at a time when we seem to be drifting apart, with perceived differences appearing to overwhelm the many things we have in common, both culturally and religiously."
Publications
- Camminare insieme, Milan, Bompiani, 2015.
- Peacemaking : An Inside Story of the 1994 Jordanian-Israeli Treaty, Oklahoma, University of Oklahoma Press, 2006.
- To Be A Muslim: Islam, Peace, and Democracy, Alain Elkann coauthor, Sussex Academic Press, Handcover, December 2003,,.
- Continuity, Innovation and Changes : Selected essays, Amman, Majlis El Hassan, 2001.
- Essere musulmano, Milan, Bompiani, 2001.
- Christianity in the Arab World, SCM Press with Foreword by the Prince of Wales, 1995,,.
- Search for Peace : The Politics of the Middle Ground in the Arab East, New-York, St. Martin’s Press, 1984.
- Palestinian Self-Determination: A Study of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Quartet Books, New York 1981,.
- A Study on Jerusalem, London - New-York, Longman, 1979.
Note