The young queen
of Jordan said:"I think it's very important that
you realize that for the majority of Muslims, they
do not hate Americans"
By
Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent ASSIST News
Service, October 11
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS (ANS) --
Her Majesty Queen Rania Al-Abdullah of Jordan was
recently a guest on the Oprah Winfrey Show on CBS
television and took great pains to explain to the
studio and television audience some of the
misconceptions most people have of Islam and the
Muslim faith.
During the October 5 "Oprah"
show featuring Queen Rania, who is the wife of
Jordan's King Abdullah II, Ms. Winfrey said:"When
this first happened on September 11, I think it
came as a shock to so many of us that other people
in the world hated us so much. Can you help
explain that to us?" (Pictured: Queen Rania
receives flowers from school children - photo
courtesy of Petra News Agency).
Queen
Rania responded:" I think it's very important that
you realize that for the majority of Muslims, they
do not hate Americans. They do not hate the
American way of life. In fact, many countries look
at the American model as one that needs to be
replicated, one that they aspire to achieve.
"We are talking about a minority of people
who feel that they have been unjustly treated by
the United States. Some of them feel that U.S.
foreign policy might have been partial and not
completely fair to all parties involved, and they
wanted their voice to be heard. Unfortunately, the
means that they have used are ones that are
condemned all over the Arab world.
"We do
not approve of these terrorist acts or any
gruesome activities like the ones we saw on
September 11. The American people have to realize
that the whole world is with them, they feel with
them. They are not hated by the rest of the world.
Some people feel unfairly treated, but I think
that dialogue is the way to understand each other
and to reach out to each other," the Queen said.
Ms. Winfrey then told the audience:"What
we're trying to do on this show today is to bring
about an understanding of what it's like to be
Muslim in the world, and what is Islam. I think
there's a lot of confusion. You're very
westernized, and then we see women wearing the
hoods, the burqas and the hijabs. What makes one
acceptable, and the other not? Are you accepted in
your country not wearing the scarves? What does
the scarf represent?"
"I'd really like to
commend you for having Islam as the subject of
your show. I think this is the right time to reach
out and have this open, ongoing dialogue about
different religions," answered Queen Rania.
"[Just] like in Christianity, there are
different interpretations of Islam, and there are
different degrees of conservatism. It's a personal
choice. Some people are more conservative than
others. The important thing is the spirit of
Islam. That is all about tolerance, about doing
good, diversity, quality, and human dignity," she
said.
The Queen went on:"The fact that
Islam is very tolerant means that it doesn't
impose anything on other people. You are supposed
to behave in a certain way, or dress in a certain
way out of conviction, not because somebody
imposes their own ideology on you. I believe one's
relationship with God, and how one chooses to
practice religion, is an intensely personal
choice."
"So you as an individual choose
whether or not you want to be robed or not robed,
or wear your head covered or not? That's not
imposed upon you by your religion?" asked Ms.
Winfrey.
"In our country, that is what we
believe," said the Queen."We give women the choice
to wear the headscarf or not. It's a personal
choice. As I said, it is not the state that is
supposed to impose on individuals what they
believe in. That is their own personal choice."
Asked by Ms. Winfrey if the Queen was a
practicing Muslim, Queen Rania said:"Yes, very
much so. Muslims are required to pray five times a
day. We fast the holy month of Ramadan, which is,
I guess, equivalent to Lent in Christianity. We
are meant to give to charity. Once in our
lifetime, we have to make a pilgrimage to the holy
site of Mecca. These are the basic principles and
practices of Islam. But more importantly, Islam is
about spiritual fulfillment, about morals, about
trying to purify your soul. That is something that
has to be very much emphasized."
Ms.
Winfrey asked the Queen what life is like for
Muslim women in Jordan. "I think we all have a
misinterpretation that the women wearing the robes
are dominated by men, that the women don't have a
voice of their own. Is any part of that true?" she
said.
The Queen responded:"In Jordan,
women lead a very free life. We find the level of
education for men and women in Jordan is equal. We
have women who participate in the business sector,
in government, in the armed forces, in the police
force, women judges. They're very much free to
choose what kind of life they want to lead. The
lives that they lead here are very similar to
those that you see in other countries in the
world.
"That is not to say that they don't
have challenges, but I think that the challenges
that women face in Jordan are very similar to
those that you see in other countries in the
world, particularly developing countries. The
obstacles that they face are more social or
cultural hindrances. Women in our part of the
world have to be encouraged to be more confident,
to voice their concerns, to fight for their legal
rights, and to do what the women in the States and
in Europe did: try to gain their rights by voicing
their concerns and fighting for them," the Queen
said.
Responding to a question about
"honor killings," Queen Rania said: "It's very
important for me to clarify that honor killings
are not in any way condoned or accepted in Islam.
They are, in fact, un-Islamic. These are more
cultural and social aspects that we have to deal
with here.
"What we're looking to do here
in Jordan, and our voices have been heard and many
people have been rallying, is to try to explain
the whole issue of honor killings, and to try to
explain where Islam stands [on] this issue. Once
we have this open dialogue and we reach to the
grassroots where people can understand this issue,
we are hoping through democratic process to change
these laws that we have in Jordan," the Queen
said.
She added:"The problem was the fact
that people didn't understand what honor killings
were and how often they were happening and all the
dimensions of the issue. We need more public
awareness about the issue and that's what we're
doing right now. It's only a matter of time before
these laws that you're referring to are going to
be changed."
Quoting a Newsweek magazine
article reporting that there are some Muslim
fundamentalists that see the Queen as a threat by
saying, "She is attacking our ancient values,
tearing at our social fabrics as a member of our
moderate Muslim brotherhood," Ms. Winfrey asked
the Queen how she responded to that ?
"You
find fundamentalists and extremism in every
religion and these are the people on the fringes.
They are expressing their own point of view, a
personal point of view. I believe in what I am
doing. It's my personal choice. I feel that people
of my country accept me the way that I am, and I
hope the rest of the world will see it that way. I
cannot really answer to these kinds of things
because everybody is entitled to his own opinion.
Ms. Winfrey then asked the Queen: "Do you
feel that you represent a large portion of the
Arab world in terms of women being progressive,
forward-looking, being smart, thinking for
themselves?"
"There is a large portion of
women who are like that. As I said earlier, I
think that the challenges that women face in our
part of the world are more related to some social
and cultural constraints. These are the issues
that we need to deal with. Religion provides
equality for women. Islam views women as full and
equal partners to men, so [women's] rights are
guaranteed by Islam. It's up to us to try to make
use of these rights, to try to voice our concerns
and make sure that we achieve our full rights,"
aid the Queen.
"So anything that we see
that doesn't represent what you're saying is a
distortion of Islam, correct?" asked Ms. Winfrey.
"Absolutely. I think that is what
extremism is. Extremists are on the fringes of
religion. By nature, Islam and the Qur'an, which
is the holy book in our religion, came to apply to
humankind at any point in history, which means it
is open to interpretation. I feel that a lot of
these extremists have taken this as a way to
justify and to twist the facts in Islam to justify
their own actions and their own beliefs, and in
many cases to fulfill their own political
agendas."
|