My colleague and I began our day early this morning with His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan. We drank ginger with lemon and honey together. The meeting was not protocol; it was a simple reminder that some officials possess something deeper than power: a reassurance that makes the person sitting before them feel seen, heard, and valued.
There are men not defined by their position, but revealed by their essence. His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan is one of those who graduated from the Hashemite school not with official privilege, but with a rare human grace; that type of refinement not manufactured in offices, but in hearts that have understood the meaning of proximity to people of both awe and mercy.
Abu Al-Hasan's humanity is not behavior acquired from political experience, but a quiet flame he carried from his closeness to the Kings; the Hashemites who believe that 'the state's prestige' does not supersede 'the citizen's dignity,' and that the greatest thing an official can offer is not speeches or conferences, but a genuine reassurance felt by those who sit before him.
Abu Al-Hasan is not a door opened for people, but a sanctuary. He is not just the head of the Court,but an extension of a Hashemite spirit that sees the citizen as the heart of the story.
His humanity is not a coincidence, nor an ornament, but an imprint left on him by those among whom he lived and saw how a state is built from respecting the individual, and how true greatness lies in remaining simple no matter how high your status.
Therefore, when he receives you, you do not see a position; you see a man who learned that the state's prestige begins the moment an official smiles at an ordinary citizen, and that the greatest door is the one through which the entrant does not feel like a stranger.
His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan… Is not a'high office,' but a refinement nurtured among the Hashemites, transformed in his hands into a pure humanity that resembles them.
Majed Abu Roman
Amman- Majed Abu Roman
My colleague and I began our day early this morning with His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan. We drank ginger with lemon and honey together. The meeting was not protocol; it was a simple reminder that some officials possess something deeper than power: a reassurance that makes the person sitting before them feel seen, heard, and valued.
There are men not defined by their position, but revealed by their essence. His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan is one of those who graduated from the Hashemite school not with official privilege, but with a rare human grace; that type of refinement not manufactured in offices, but in hearts that have understood the meaning of proximity to people of both awe and mercy.
Abu Al-Hasan's humanity is not behavior acquired from political experience, but a quiet flame he carried from his closeness to the Kings; the Hashemites who believe that 'the state's prestige' does not supersede 'the citizen's dignity,' and that the greatest thing an official can offer is not speeches or conferences, but a genuine reassurance felt by those who sit before him.
Abu Al-Hasan is not a door opened for people, but a sanctuary. He is not just the head of the Court,but an extension of a Hashemite spirit that sees the citizen as the heart of the story.
His humanity is not a coincidence, nor an ornament, but an imprint left on him by those among whom he lived and saw how a state is built from respecting the individual, and how true greatness lies in remaining simple no matter how high your status.
Therefore, when he receives you, you do not see a position; you see a man who learned that the state's prestige begins the moment an official smiles at an ordinary citizen, and that the greatest door is the one through which the entrant does not feel like a stranger.
His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan… Is not a'high office,' but a refinement nurtured among the Hashemites, transformed in his hands into a pure humanity that resembles them.
Majed Abu Roman
Amman- Majed Abu Roman
My colleague and I began our day early this morning with His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan. We drank ginger with lemon and honey together. The meeting was not protocol; it was a simple reminder that some officials possess something deeper than power: a reassurance that makes the person sitting before them feel seen, heard, and valued.
There are men not defined by their position, but revealed by their essence. His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan is one of those who graduated from the Hashemite school not with official privilege, but with a rare human grace; that type of refinement not manufactured in offices, but in hearts that have understood the meaning of proximity to people of both awe and mercy.
Abu Al-Hasan's humanity is not behavior acquired from political experience, but a quiet flame he carried from his closeness to the Kings; the Hashemites who believe that 'the state's prestige' does not supersede 'the citizen's dignity,' and that the greatest thing an official can offer is not speeches or conferences, but a genuine reassurance felt by those who sit before him.
Abu Al-Hasan is not a door opened for people, but a sanctuary. He is not just the head of the Court,but an extension of a Hashemite spirit that sees the citizen as the heart of the story.
His humanity is not a coincidence, nor an ornament, but an imprint left on him by those among whom he lived and saw how a state is built from respecting the individual, and how true greatness lies in remaining simple no matter how high your status.
Therefore, when he receives you, you do not see a position; you see a man who learned that the state's prestige begins the moment an official smiles at an ordinary citizen, and that the greatest door is the one through which the entrant does not feel like a stranger.
His Excellency Abu Al-Hasan… Is not a'high office,' but a refinement nurtured among the Hashemites, transformed in his hands into a pure humanity that resembles them.
Majed Abu Roman
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Human in high office: Abu Al-Hasan, embodiment of Hashemite ethics on the ground
 
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