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TEXT: PRESIDENT'S REMARKS
ON THE LOSS OF KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN
(The King and Jordan won respect and admiration of the
entire world)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
February 7, 1999
11:02 A.M. EST
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT ON THE DEATH OF HIS
MAJESTY KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN
The Rose Garden
THE PRESIDENT: Today the world mourns the loss of one
of its great leaders, King Hussein of Jordan. I mourn the
loss of a partner and friend. He was a magnificent man,
and like so many, I loved and admired him.
King Hussein once wrote, "I believe we must live
with courage and will. I must do so because, regardless
of any difficulties I face, when the time comes for me to
lose my life, I would at least have done my best."
He did far better than that. A humble man and a king;
a leader whose nobility came not from his title, but his
character; a man who believed that we are all God's
children, bound to live together in mutual respect and
tolerance.
King Hussein was ennobled. Many times his life was
threatened, but each brush with mortality ennobled him.
He learned that God only gives us a limited number of
opportunities and that we must make the most of them.
Surely, he did.
As he survived, Jordan survived. He grew in wisdom,
and so did Jordan. He grew in stature, and so did Jordan.
He won the respect and admiration of the entire world,
and so did his beloved Jordan.
We remember his voice, each word slowly said, followed
by a pause, a moment for silent reflection, as if he were
reminding us that it is wise to think before we speak, to
speak before we act. His manner was as strong and calming
as his message.
We remember him piloting his plane, traveling wherever
his cause took him; flying at night in the years when
courage and stealth were required just to speak to one's
enemies; soaring in the sunlight above Jerusalem when the
peace he forged with Israel made that possible again.
He once said, "The beauty of flying high in the
skies will always, to me, symbolize freedom." King
Hussein lived his life on a higher plain. With the
aviator's gift of seeing beyond the low-flying obstacles
of hatred and mistrust that heartbreak and loss place in
all our paths. He spent his life fighting for the
dignified aspirations of his people and all Arab people.
He worked all his life to build friendship between the
Jordanian and American people. He dedicated the final
years of his life to the promise not only of coexistence,
but of partnership between the Arab world and Israel.
Indeed, he understood what must be clear now to anyone
who has flown above the Middle East and seen in one
panorama at sunset the lights of Amman and Tel Aviv and
Damascus shining in the sky, that in the relationship
among peoples who share this small, sacred corner of
Earth, one thing, and only one, is predestined -- all are
bound to be neighbors; the question is not whether they
will live side by side, but how. God willing, soon all
will see what he saw and preached. There can be no peace,
no dignity, no security of any of Abraham's children
until there is peace, dignity and security for all of
them.
During the Wye Summit, when the talks were not going
so well, he came out within a few short minutes and
changed the tenor of the meeting. Though frail with
fighting for his own life, he gave life to the process
many felt was failing. The smallest man in the room that
day was the largest; the frailest was the strongest. The
man with the least time remaining reminded us we are
working not only for ourselves, but for all eternity.
To Queen Noor, I extend the heartfelt condolences of
the American people. At times such as these, words are
inadequate. But the friendship that joins Jordan and the
United States, for which your marriage stood and your
love still stands, that will never fail. You are a
daughter of America, and a Queen of Jordan. You have made
two nations very proud. Hillary and I cherish the
wonderful times we shared with you and His Majesty, and
today we say to you, and indeed to all the King's large
and loving family, our prayers are with you.
We say to his son, the new King Abdullah, we wish you
well. Our prayers are with you, as you assume the mantle
of your father and grandfather. And to the people of
Jordan, again we say, we extend the hand of friendship
and partnership.
The Koran teaches, you belong to God and you return to
him. Today, my friend is in Paradise and God has welcomed
home a good and faithful servant.
Thank you very much.
(End text)
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