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Jordan's Queen Uses YouTube to Seed Cultural Dialogue

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The media-savvy queen of Jordan, Queen Rania, is taking to YouTube with an effort to battle stereotypes of Muslims and the Middle East. Rania said she wants young people everywhere "to see the personal side of my region, to know the places and faces and rituals and culture that shape the part of the world I call home."


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Jordan's media-savvy Queen Rania has launched an appeal on YouTube for a global dialogue to dismantle stereotypes of Muslims and the Arab world, the royal palace said Monday.

Rania vowed to work to break down such preconceptions and wants people to "know the real Arab world ... unedited, unscripted and unfiltered."

Her YouTube Latest News about YouTube page invites viewers to give their opinions of the Middle East and talk about stereotyped images that they may have of Arabs and Muslims.

A Different View

In the palace statement, Rania was quoted as saying she wanted young people everywhere "to see the personal side of my region, to know the places and faces and rituals and culture that shape the part of the world I call home."

Although traditionally conservative and tribal-oriented, Jordan strives for a degree of modernity that distinguishes it from some other countries in the Middle East.

YouTube is popular among Jordanian youth, who make up more than half of the country's population of nearly 6 million.

There is also easy access to the Internet Over 800,000 High Quality Domains Available For Your Business. Click Here., unlike in some parts of the region, such as Saudi Arabia, Iran and Syria.

Trying to Connect

"In a world where it's so easy to connect to one another, we still remain very much disconnected," Rania said in her YouTube video.

The Palestinian-born Rania, who married King Abdullah in 1993, promotes education, micro-credit financing and other efforts to lift Jordan out of poverty.

© 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
© 2008 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.

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