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Jordan’s royal wedding: Joy, politics, and an eye toward the kingdom’s future

Jordan’s royal wedding today was about more than the who’s who of VIP guests and days of street parties, music, and joy. It was an introduction to the next king.

The wedding of Crown Prince Hussein to Rajwa Alseif, a Saudi architect and cousin of the Saudi ruling family, was a break from tradition in Jordan. Unlike in the United Kingdom, royal weddings here have long been low-key affairs.

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Royal weddings often highlight tradition and history. In Jordan, celebrations around its crown prince’s nuptials are all about the future.

These were the largest celebrations the country has seen in two decades, and they bring together a match of political expediency. There is hope among some officials and Jordanians that marital ties between the future king and the Saudi royal family will preserve Jordan’s place in a region increasingly dominated by Saudi leadership and waning American influence.

It was also a moment of joy after five years of geopolitical and internal tumult in a traditionally stable and steadfast kingdom.

“Today we are rejoicing for our future,” says Mohammed Sawaya, one of thousands of citizens on Amman’s streets waiting for the royal procession to pass after today’s nuptials. “Prince Hussein … understands youth issues, he can navigate the world, and he is going to lead us into the future.”

A national holiday, free concerts, air shows, bagpipers, world leaders, a shuttered capital – the wedding of Jordan’s Crown Prince Hussein on Thursday was not your typical royal wedding.

More than nuptials with a who’s who of VIP guests, these public celebrations, according to Jordan’s royal palace, were “the big event.” They’re the introduction to Jordan’s next king.

“Today we are rejoicing for our future,” says Mohammed Sawaya, one of thousands of citizens on Amman’s streets waiting for the royal procession to pass after today’s wedding ceremony. Nearby, his car sports a giant decal of the crown prince and his bride.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Royal weddings often highlight tradition and history. In Jordan, celebrations around its crown prince’s nuptials are all about the future.

“Prince Hussein is our age, he understands youth issues, he can navigate the world, and he is going to lead us into the future,” Mr. Sawaya says. More than half of Jordanians are under the age of 30.

Raad Adayleh/AP

Jordanians wave the national flags in anticipation of the royal motorcade in Amman, just ahead of the royal wedding.

The wedding of the crown prince to Rajwa Alseif, a Saudi architect and cousin of the Saudi ruling family, was a break from tradition in Jordan where, unlike the United Kingdom, royal weddings have long been low-key affairs.

They were the largest celebrations the country has seen in two decades. The weeklong festivities kicked off on Monday with free concerts and dabkeh line dances at companies and university campuses, and in village squares.

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