75% of Jordanians are Palestinians, treated like a minority in their own land. The "royal" ruling class are Hashemites, installed by the Saudi royal family.
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from Mexico
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
75% of Jordanians are Palestinians, treated like a minority in their own land. The "royal" ruling class are Hashemites, installed by the Saudi royal family.
AI-generated images of Princess Iman bint Abdullah II of Jordan.
With just a couple of days to go until the wedding of Jordan’s Crown Prince Hussein & Rajwa Al Saif, wedding promotion is in full swing on social media.
All over social media, I’ve noticed posts by both media and fans alike which are positive about the union. The negative posts are few and far between.
The Hashemites don’t have a particularly large following outside the Arab world, when compared to other monarchies or sheikhdoms. CP Hussein is perhaps the most popular and yet most people in the western world have no idea who he is. It is therefore, unsurprising that there are few western fans getting excited about the wedding.
The engagement itself came out of the blue. There were no clues in the months leading up to the event that Hussein was ready for marriage. In fact, barely a year before he had said in a TV interview that he was single.
As soon as the engagement photos were released, many people began to comment that it looked like an arranged marriage. The photos and video looked awkward. Rajwa looked genuinely happy, while Hussein looked like he was conducting a business meeting.
People immediately began to speculate about the reasoning behind this arrangement (if it is in fact an arrangement). Details about Rajwa were released. Her father is a Saudi billionaire property developer and her mother is the second cousin of Mohammed Bin Salman. The reason most people concluded was behind this marriage was money. The Hashemites have been caught up in various money related scandals, so it made sense.
Before too long, this descended into hatred and criticism of Rajwa, which I will cover in another post. It also changed from being arranged to forced, which are two very different things.
Meanwhile, something interesting was happening. Negative comments or anything remotely suggested an arrangement were either being removed or bombarded with pro-wedding replies, often from accounts with no posts. People were going out of their way to find accounts with negative comments and counter them.
Even if I explained away the engagement photos as nerves, the behaviour that followed actually only increased suspicion. I mean, when a royal or celeb gets engaged, there will always be unhappy fans. There will always be rumours and criticism. It’s unpleasant but it runs its course.
Unless of course, you do actually have something to hide. Which brings us to the fact that someone had gone to great lengths to remove everything from the internet about Rajwa prior to her engagement to Hussein. Not an easy task, considering the internet never forgets!
Since the internet never forgets, the more dedicated fans out there did still manage to dig up a little more info and a few old photos but nothing significant, to my knowledge. Another interesting side note is that these seem to have come from sources such as Facebook and Twitter. Much more difficult sites to remove photos and information from unless you’re the account holder who originally posted them.
In the months that followed, we saw an obvious PR push from the RHC to promote the union and Rajwa in particular. The PR never said that it was a love story as such, yet that is the vibe they were pushing. Especially with comments from Queen Rania about how she is like a third daughter to her.
Most people commenting on social media added to the love story narrative, continuing to do battle with the minority who were suggesting otherwise.
CP Hussein even discussed how they’d met at an event for his foundation, saying it was through a friend. He said they’d met once and some time had past before he was reminded of her by someone. They exchanged some messages and the engagement happened quickly.
Again, many took to social media to say that it was clear how much he loved her and that they’d met through a friend, therefore it wasn’t an arranged marriage.
Others pointed out how obvious this story sounded and how unlikely it was to have suddenly fallen in love and become engaged in such a short amount of time.
(I might go into my thoughts about that in another post because I find it an interesting point)
Unlikely it certainly is, but not impossible. Still, I think many people have overlooked something else which makes this union not only suspect but also concerning.
Just over a year before the engagement was the sedition case in Jordan. I won’t go into detail because it’s a long story but certainly worth looking into it you’re curious. The very short version is that King Abdullah’s brother, Prince Hamza (former CP of Jordan) was accused of an attempted coup with the help of a few others. It was immensely problematic and tied to a few other countries. Saudi Arabia being one of those counties and one of Mohammed Bin Salman’s senior advisors working with Hamza. Of course, Saudi Arabia denied having anything to do with it.
If true, (check the details and decide for yourself what you think) this can’t have been good news for King Abdullah. He’s always had a tumultuous relationship with MBS and accusations like that won’t have gone down well with MBS either way. Not to mention rumours that as custodian of two of Islam's most holy sites, MBS was keen to gain custodianship of Al-Aqsa too, which the Hashemites are currently custodians of. There have been some interesting moves made between Saudi Arabia and Israel, which put Jordan in a precarious position.
So, what are the odds that shortly after these events, the single Crown Prince meets and falls in love with a relative of MBS? If true, it’s reminiscent of Romeo & Juliette but in reality, I suspect that there’s a lot more to this story and that love isn’t the driving force behind it.
Links for further reading:
Amman fears warming Israel-Saudi relations may threaten its hold on holy Islamic site
The lightning-quick, equally roughshod trial, with seven sessions over just three weeks, may have ended a perceived threat to Jordan's monar
Thinking about Tariq Tell, “Guns, Gold, and Grain: War and Food Supply in the Making of Transjordan,” in War, Institutions, and Social Change in the Middle East, ed. Steven Heydemann (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000). I wrote this review a few years ago to practice critical writing - not the best thing I’ve written but Tell’s essay infuriated me at the time.
States grow through war, are indeed designed for war, and it is usual, in studying the history of the formation of states in Europe and Asia in the early modern era, to focus on the act of warfare and its links to the growth in taxation, bureaucracy, markets and even citizenship and nationalism. So what happens when a state is built by actively attacking and challenging the very processes that are supposed to be tied to a strengthening, centralised state? This is the subject of Tariq Tell’s essay on the origins of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, or Transjordan as it was called between the world wars.
Tell attempts to move beyond the narrow historiographies of Hashemite propaganda of a patriotic people’s war rallied behind the sharif of Mecca, and the Arab nationalist counter-argument that Hussein’s revolt was a narrow, reactionary affair, the Bedouin tribes fighting for gold and not for a wider Arabist ideal. Instead, “it is precisely the social and economic conditions of war, local strategies, and material incentives, rather than the high politics of British treachery and Hashemite ambition, that hold center stage” in his narrative, focussed upon the way in which food supply “shaped patterns of participation.” Where the Turks controlled adequate supplies of food or the markets, “tribal leaders displayed a greater reluctance to join forces with the anti-Ottoman campaign of Sharif Hussein.” Only good harvests or material success in capturing those points of supply ensured widespread tribal backing for the Arab Revolt.
Tell lays the success of the revolt on “the inhabitants of the province, whether townspeople or Bedouin…united in their hostility to the centralizing bent of Ottoman reform.” Ottoman rule was extended into the Transjordan between 1851 and 1893 by forts and outposts, reinforced by loyal settlers from the Caucasus, Circassians and Turcomen implanted along the frontier. These settlements became centres for Arab merchants and professionals, who turned a former Circassian village, Amman (the current capital!) into a market town. Grain farming increased due to booming prices, while the collection of taxes “created excess demand for liquidity and, therefore, an opportunity for merchants to accumulate capital through money lending.” From the 1880’s onward, land transfers increased as communal Bedouin pastures were bought by settlers, merchants, moneylenders and bureaucrats, who, along with some Bedouin shayks, imported Palestinian and Egyptian sharecroppers. The surplus of this expansion of farming helped to solidify a new local elite. What, in some anthropologies of the Middle Eastern state, is called a ‘dual system’ of settled agriculture alongside nomadic husbandry, developed uneasily, with frequent raids and revolts well into the 1890s.
Tell stresses that Transjordan was an unlikely place for Arabist ideology to develop, as it was relatively ‘backwards,’ a frontier where the state was essentially substituting for any other social organization, and actually seen as being ‘progressive’ or at least superior to the alternative. But both the Bedouins and the Sherif of Mecca feared the centralising efforts of the Ottomans, especially the expansion of the railway, which curbed their significant autonomy. Tell notes, for instance, that Hussein’s call to revolt “appealed to educated Hijazi opinion in traditional rather than Arabist terms…and the articles and editorials of his mouthpiece Al-Qibla, accused the “atheistic” CUP [Commitee of Union and Progress, ruling party of the Ottoman Empire] of tampering with the Islamic legitimacy of the Ottoman state and called for the preservation of the ancient privileges of the Hijaz.” The fighting forces assembled by the Hashemites in 1916 and after were mostly, almost entirely Bedouin or Arab tribesmen: there were few deserters from the Arab officers in the ranks of the Ottoman army, and those that did join the revolt played little role in Hussein’s forces except in training and administration. The centrality of Bedouins and Arab nomads according to Tell “stamped the Arab Movement with a tribal character. This ensured that whatever the motives of its instigators, the form and content of the Arab Revolt reproduced traditional patterns of political change in the rural hinterlands of the Middle East.”
Guns, grain and gold, the title of Tell’s essay, were crucial for victory, all three made available by a massive British subsidy of £125,000 per month. Even with this money, “the logistics of food supply in the north Arabian desert (Badiyat al-Sham) worked against the revolt.” Even powerful Arab and Bedouin tribal organisations would not join the Sharif unless they enjoyed security “not only of arms, but of food.” In the last year of the war, for instance, it was a great harvest and abundant rains, combined with the British occupation of Palestine that decisively turned the Arab landlords conclusively against Ottoman rule.
Victory, however, did not cement a new Arab state in Transjordan: instead, as in other wartime situations, state collapse led to civil strife, as those groups held in check by the Ottomans turned on each other. Nomads raided the British or settled areas, and herders, peasants and sharecroppers began to burn “the land registries and tax offices in an effort to rid themselves of fiscal obligation or debt.” There were revolts against conscription, taxation and the gendarmerie, and local British and Hashemite authority struggled to implement their rule. Yet Tell, bizarrely, perhaps suffering from a desire to paint the state as a normative in this case, sees all of this resistance as tribal, backwards and anti-modern.
This violence seems, though, and caveat, as I am someone unacquainted with the primary sources or the greater specifics of Jordan, like a peasant revolution, especially if debt and taxation burdens were so high cultivators were willing to risk state repression to destroy the records of their bondage; remember, Bedouins too had lost much of their communal lands to new elites and sharecropper settlers, so their resistance shouldn’t really be a mystery, either. Instead, Tell argues this was all a problematic “resurgent local order,” the “renewal of the tribal particularisms on which it was based.” Certainly Bedouin raids were disruptive of settled agriculture and trade, so it was left to the British to ‘stabilise’ the country, following the efforts of a Captain Brunton
who formed a regular body of cavalry and machine gunners in Amman. The new force had the explicit aim of curbing bedouin raids upon the settled population and was initially recruited from the Circassians settled by the Ottomans for the same purpose. In October 1920 the force successfully collected taxes from Sahab and imposed peace after tribal strife in Madaba.
So, essentially, they replicated the Ottoman state but even more effectively.
Tells’ attempts, in his conclusion, to argue that war distorted, stretched out or challenged the state because of “extended lines of communication” and subsidies independent of local resources. Fair enough, but he then unfavourably compares the failure of state building and state-collapse in Jordan in the immediate aftermath of a total war to the longue durée of European state-building, which occurred over centuries, and even in its most accelerated states, such as after the Thirty Years War or in the early 19th century, still took decades of protracted, localised conflicts to formalise, against considerable localist, elite and peasant resistance. This argument undermines, in part, some of his early emphasis on the marginality of Jordan. State building was hard in Jordan not because the local society was ‘backwards’ but because the British, and Hussein, seemed to think it was “unpromising.” For Hussein Jordan was just a waypoint to Syria and for the British it was little more than a strategic frontier for Egypt and the Suez Canal, and proved very difficult to govern because the local elite had “little administrative experience” and were “tainted” by Arab nationalist political radicalism.[1]
Tell is really describing a temporarily successful regionalist revolt against a state-building process similar to that of other ‘latecomer’ modernisers like Siam, Iran or Ethiopia. The difference is that a more powerful neighbouring state used war and existing discontent to bring an end to what seems a ‘classic’ case of indigenous state formation and replace it with a colonial state. Given that it only took two years for the tribal resurgence, as described by A. K. S. Lambton[2], to be crushed by the British, the chaos after Ottoman collapse does not seem to confirm Tell’s suspicion “that the results of war making were more in keeping with the ideas of Ibn Khaldun,” i.e. chaos and degeneration. (The continued insistence that Ibn Khaldun, like de Toqueville, be treated as an ‘objective’ witness to their own times, and be used uncritically to support arguments about very different times and places, frustrates me to no end.)
The narrative analysis Tell lays down should make any scholar of war and state formation suspicious of how successful war actually can be at strengthening states. Additionally, having just reread pieces of David Sneath’s Headless State, I’m not particularly inclined to Tell’s fixation on an unproblematic treatments of tribe and state and his assumption that tribes are antithetical to states, which are somehow normative to modernity whereas tribes are just particularistic, dangerous, reactionary throwbacks. A recent article by Yoav Alon argues, quite convincingly, the opposite: that in order to rule at all, the British and Arab state officials absolutely “co-operated with tribes, shared power with them, co-opted their leaders and even incorporated tribal values into the ethos of the state.”[3] There is nothing, therefore, preventing the tribe, or the nomad, from integrating with and gaining from a modern state.
[1] Timothy J. Paris, Britain, the Hashemites, and Arab Rule, 1920-1925: the Sherifian solution (London: Frank Cass Publishers, 2003), p. 126.
[2] Lambton, “The Tribal Resurgence and the Decline of Bureaucracy in the Eighteenth Century,” in Studies in 18th Century Islamic History, ed. T. Naff and R. Owen, London and Amsterdam, 1977, pp. 108-29.
[3] Yoav Alon, “Tribal Shaykhs and the Limits of British Imperial Rule in Transjordan, 1920–46,” Journal of Imperial & Commonwealth History; Jan. 2004, Vol. 32, Issue 1, p. 69-92: p. 71.
King Hussein did not look at social and cultural programs in sophisticated development terms. He simply wanted to ensure that every person whose life he could touch had access to the best possible education, health services and jobs, so they, in turn, could contribute to the nation-building process.
Queen Noor, “Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life” (2003).
AI image of Princess Iman with hair bangs.
To most Israelis, we were just "Arabs." They did not know how different we are from one another, or our cultural terms of reference, or what our concerns are. The Israeli equation was a simple one. The "good" Arabs were the ones who talked to Israel; the "bad Arabs were the ones who did not.
Queen Noor, “Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life” (2003).
When I was growing up in the United States, the prevailing view of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war was that Israel was forced to defend itself against hordes of bloodthirsty Arabs pouring across its borders. But now that I was living in Jordan, I discovered that the Arab view was quite the opposite: Israel was on the offensive, demonstrated by the fact that most of the fighting was not within the territory partitioned to Israel but in the territory partitioned to the Palestinians. The Arab "armies," which were hardly armies save for Jordan's Arab Legion, crossed into Palestine to come to the aid of their Palestinian Arab brethren and tried to prevent Israeli forces from taking more territory. They failed. By the end of the "year of the catastrophe," Israel had captured 78% of the land assigned to the Arab state, thereby gaining nearly one-third more of the territory than the UN had originally granted in UN General Assembly Resolution 181, which partitioned Palestine.
Queen Noor, “Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life” (2003).