Current:Home > MarketsPrince William and Kate show up for royal wedding of Jordan's own Crown Prince Hussein and Rajwa Alseif -Visionary Growth Labs
Prince William and Kate show up for royal wedding of Jordan's own Crown Prince Hussein and Rajwa Alseif
View
Date:2025-04-15 04:25:30
Amman, Jordan — Jordan's highly anticipated royal wedding day got underway on Thursday with the surprise announcement that Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate had arrived to witness the nuptials of Crown Prince Hussein and his Saudi Arabian bride. The attendance of the British royals had been kept under wraps and was only confirmed by Jordanian state media a few hours before the start of the palace ceremony.
The wedding of Jordan's 28-year-old heir to the throne and Rajwa Alseif, a 29-year-old architect linked to her own country's monarch, emphasizes continuity in an Arab state prized for its longstanding stability. The festivities, which are to start Thursday afternoon, also introduce Hussein to a wider global audience.
The celebration buttresses the royal family's order of succession, refreshes its image after a palace feud and may even help resource-poor Jordan forge a strategic bond with its oil-rich neighbor, Saudi Arabia.
- The coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla
On Thursday morning, Saudi wedding guests and tourists — the men wearing white dishdasha robes and the women in brightly colored abayas — filtered through the sleek marbled lobby of the Four Seasons Hotel in Amman. Noura Al Sudairi, an aunt of the bride, was wearing sweatpants and sneakers on her way to breakfast.
"We are all so excited, so happy about this union," she said. "Of course it's a beautiful thing for our families, and for the relationship between Jordan and Saudi Arabia."
Excitement over the nuptials — Jordan's biggest royal event in years — has been building in the capital of Amman, where congratulatory banners of Hussein and his beaming bride adorn buses and hang over winding hillside streets. Shops had competing displays of royal regalia. Royal watchers speculated about which dress designer Alseif would select- still an official secret,
Nancy Tirana, a 28-year-old law intern, said she spent the last week scrutinizing Alseif's every move and stitch of clothing.
"She's just so beautiful, so elegant, and it's clear from her body language how much she loves the queen," she said, referring to Hussein's glamorous mother, Rania. "I feel like all of Jordan is getting married," Tirana gushed as she ate mansaf, Jordan's national dish of milky mutton and rice, before heading to a wedding-themed concert.
Jordan's 11 million citizens have watched the young crown prince rise in prominence in recent years, as he increasingly joined his father, King Abdullah II, in public appearances. Hussein has graduated from Georgetown University, joined the military and gained some global recognition speaking at the U.N. General Assembly. His wedding, experts say, marks his next crucial rite of passage.
"It's not just a marriage, it's the presentation of the future king of Jordan," said political analyst Amer Sabaileh. "The issue of the crown prince has been closed."
The wedding may create a brief feel-good moment for Jordanians during tough economic times, including persistent youth unemployment and an ailing economy.
Palace officials have turned the event — a week after Jordan's 77th birthday — into something of a PR campaign. Combining tradition and modernity, the royal family introduced a wedding hashtag (#Celebrating Al Hussein) and omnipresent logo that fuses the couple's initials into the Arabic words "We rejoice."
On the streets of Amman, Jordanian flags and red banners reading "celebrating Al Hussain" were everywhere. CBS News producer Omar Abdulkader said people lined both sides of the capital's Al Zahran street to wave flags at passing convoys carrying dignitaries to the ceremony wedding.
"It is a national day of pride to see the crown prince getting married," Honaydah Ferhat, a Jordanian nurse who joined the crowds, told CBS News. "We get to see the new princess and the future queen today!"
The kingdom declared Thursday a public holiday so crowds of people could gather after the wedding service to wave at the couple's motorcade of red Land Rover jeeps — a nod to the traditional procession of horse riders clad in red coats during the reign of the country's founder, King Abdullah I. Tens of thousands of well-wishers to flock to free concerts and cultural events. Huge screens have been set up nationwide for crowds to watch the occasion unfold.
The signing of the marriage contract will take place at Zahran Palace in Amman, which hasn't seen such pomp and circumstance since 1993, when, on a similarly sunny June day, Abdullah married Rania, who was born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents. Decades earlier, Abdullah's father, the late King Hussein, sealed his vows in the same garden with his second wife, the British citizen Antoinette Gardiner.
In addition to the Prince and Princess of Wales, the guest list includes an array of foreign aristocrats and dignitaries, including senior royals from Europe and Asia, as well as First Lady Jill Biden and U.S. climate envoy John Kerry. Other likely attendees include Saudi aristocrats, as Alseif's mother traces her roots to the influential wife of Saudi Arabia's founder, King Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, Her billionaire father owns a major construction firm in the kingdom.
After the ceremony, the wedding party will move to Al Husseiniya Palace, a 30-minute drive away, for a reception, entertainment and a state banquet. The royals are expected to greet more than 1,700 guests at the reception.
Experts consider the marriage an advantageous alliance for the Hashemites, historic rivals of the Al Saud family to the east. Jordan has recently sought closer ties with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab petrostates, which once doled out billions of dollars to the aid-dependent country but since have reined in their spending.
Even as restaurants blared call-and-response Arabic wedding songs and cars honked in celebration downtown, some signaled the royal fairy tale was fraught as Jordanians struggle to make ends meet.
Osama, a 25-year-old bookseller, was thrilled about the occasion and festooned his car and shop windows with portraits of the royal family. But he also knew reality would return quickly.
"Of course, it's joyful," he said, declining to give his last name for fear of reprisals. "But in a couple days, we'll just go back to our problems."
- In:
- British Royal Family
- William Prince of Wales
- Prince William Duke of Cambridge
- Jordan
- Kate Duchess of Cambridge
- Saudi Arabia
- Royal Wedding
- Catherine Princess of Wales
veryGood! (39)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Hunters find human skull in South Carolina; sheriff vows best efforts to ID victim and bring justice
- 1 killed, 3 injured in avalanche at Palisades Tahoe ski resort, California officials say
- These Are the Top Must-Have Products That Amazon Influencers Can’t Live Without
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Amalija Knavs, mother of former first lady Melania Trump, dies at 78
- Bills fan killed outside Dolphins' Hard Rock Stadium after last weekend's game, police say
- 1 killed, 3 injured in avalanche at Palisades Tahoe ski resort, California officials say
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- 2 young boys, brothers ages 6 and 8, die after falling into icy pond in Wisconsin: Police
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Music streams hit 4 trillion in 2023. Country and global acts — and Taylor Swift — fueled the growth
- Less snow, same blizzards? Climate change could have weird effects on snowfall in US.
- The bird flu has killed a polar bear for the first time ever – and experts say it likely won't be the last
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Elderly couple found dead after heater measures over 1,000 degrees at South Carolina home, reports say
- Woman, who fended off developers in Hilton Head Island community, has died at 94
- Chiefs DE Charles Omenihu offers Peacock subscriptions for wild card game vs. Dolphins
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Auburn fans celebrate Nick Saban's retirement in true Auburn fashion: By rolling Toomer's Corner
Court sends case of prosecutor suspended by DeSantis back to trial judge over First Amendment issues
These Are the Top Must-Have Products That Amazon Influencers Can’t Live Without
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Engine maker Cummins to repair 600,000 Ram trucks in $2 billion emissions cheating scandal
Blood tests offered in New Mexico amid query into ‘forever chemical’ contamination at military bases
Biden administration to provide summer grocery money to 21 million kids. Here's who qualifies.