Princess Sumaya bint Hassan

Princess Sumaya

Princess Sumaya bint Hassan
Born (1971-05-14) 14 May 1971
Amman, Jordan
Spouse Nasser Judeh
(div. 2007)
Issue Tariq Judeh
Zein El Sharaf Judeh
Ali Judeh
Sukayna Judeh
House House of Hashim (by birth)
Father Prince Hassan bin Talal
Mother Princess Sarvath al-Hassan
Religion Islam
Jordanian Royal Family

HM The King
HM The Queen


HM Queen Noor

Styles of
Princess Sumaya of Jordan
Reference style Her Royal Highness
Spoken style Your Royal Highness
Alternative style Ma'am

Sumaya bint Hassan (born 14 May 1971, Amman) is a princess of Jordan.

Early life

Sumaya is the second daughter of Prince El Hassan bin Talal and Princess Sarvath El Hassan. She was born in Amman on 14 May 1971 and received her primary education in Jordan. She later attended Sherborne School for Girls in Dorset, England. She went on to graduate from the Courtauld Institute of Art at the University of London.

Marriage and children

Princess Sumaya was married to Nasser Judeh, the son of Sami Judeh, a former Cabinet Minister. As of 2015 Nasser Judeh was the country's current Minister of Foreign Affairs. They divorced in 2007.[1] They have four children:

Career

Sumaya chairs the Board of Trustees of the Princess Sumaya University for Technology (PSUT), founded in 1991.

In October 2006 she was appointed President of the Royal Scientific Society (RSS) by her father. She had previously sat on the Board of Trustees of the RSS, Jordan’s leading applied research institute. She also sits as Deputy-Chair of the Higher Council for Science and Technology (HCST), a government body that advises the State on public policy issues relating to science and technology.

Sumaya founded El Hassan Science City (EHSC), which was inaugurated by King Abdullah II on 17 April 2007.

She has taken the Directorship and Chairmanship of the National Campaign for Public Awareness of the Drivers of Change, a two-year project launched by the king in May 2010, as an initiative of EHSC.

In August 2011, she was invited by the Director General of UNESCO to join her High Panel on Science, Technology, and Innovation for Development, while in November 2011, she was elected President of the ESCWA Technology Centre which has its regional base in Amman.

Sumaya received local, regional, and international awards relating to the promotion of science, research, and technology, including The Albert Einstein Medal for Distinguished Achievement (University of Ulm, Germany, 2009), and The Lazio ‘Between Europe and the Mediterranean’ Prize (Italy, 2009). In October 2008 she was invited to become a permanent Council Member of the Science & Technology in Society Forum (STS) Japan. In 2006 she was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Star of Jordan (Wisam al-Kawkab al-Urdani) by King Abdullah II. Sumaya also received the Order of the Crown from Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, and awards from the governments of France and Sudan.

Sumaya sits on the Board of Directors of the Amman Baccalaureate School, which she joined in 2005. In 2009 she became a member of the Jordan Council of Higher Education.

She is involved with the work of the British Institute in Amman and the Council for British Research in the Levant. She is Patron of the Wadi Faynan project, an archaeological excavation in southern Jordan, and has worked with the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities on several projects relating to the conservation and development of archaeological sites in Jordan. Later, under the direction of Queen Rania Al-Abdullah, Sumaya became Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Jordan National Museum, overseeing the development of Jordan’s first national museum.

She is on the Senior Advisory Board for "Science & Diplomacy" and on the Advisory Board of the international think tank Global Thinkers Forum.

Sumaya is the Honorary Patron of the Jordan Computer Society and of several charitable organizations. She also presides over the Jordan Handball Federation and is a member of the International Handball Federation.

References

  1. "Jordan's PM Reshuffles His Cabinet". Amman: Wikileaks. 24 February 2009. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.