King Hussein, a Man for His Time?
By Aaron K. Dean
This week a friend of mine died. He wasn't an ordinary friend; he was a world fixture. Even people who
could not place Jordan on a map, would recognize King Hussein. If ever a man ruled under the sword of
Damocles, it was this king. Such was his role in the affairs of the Middle East.
I first met King Hussein when I was 21 years old. I had just graduated from Ambassador College and had
been asked by Herbert W. Armstrong to work on his Gulfstream II jet airplane. I accepted, and in June of
1974 I found myself in Palestine, travelling between Jerusalem, Israel and Ammon, Jordan. I talked for
some time with the king's younger brother, crown prince Hassan as he flew on our aircraft from Ammon
to Aquaba, the king's southern palace on the Red Sea where the king was staying.
The King was not a large man, yet his presence was larger than life. I only spent a few minutes with him
as he greeted our group before going off to a private meeting with my boss. Yet in these few minutes, I
could sense he seemed to be acting out some kind of destiny. Peace hung on a narrow thread.
Over the next 20 years my work with the Ambassador Foundation took me to Jordan many times to check
on several projects we supported. These led to many more meetings with the King, his Queen, and other
members of the royal family, all of whom were involved in the projects for the betterment of the Jordanian
people. Oil poor, but problem rich, they needed the support of others. The king capably guided his country
through the political ramifications of accepting the "right" help and avoiding political and economic
suicide.
King Hussein had been installed as king at age 17 after the assassination of the former king. He himself
had taken a bullet as a teenager, saved by a medallion he was wearing which deflected the impact of the
bullet. It obviously was not his time to go.
He faced a world largely shaped by western powers as land was divided between the Jews and the Arabs
after World War II. Palestinians fled to the closest border as the war for Israel's independence
commenced. Emotions were high, and with cause. How can a foreign power take land from one and give
it to another without strong emotions? The young king was to rule over not just his people, but these
displaced Palestinians who wanted nothing less than a war to get what they felt was theirs.
As King Hussein began to realize the solution was peace, he was faced with an environment that was not
prepared for it. In a private meeting with King Hussein in 1981, Mr. Armstrong asked King Hussein,
"Would you meet with Prime Minister Begin of Israel?" I watched his eyes as he answered, "Yes, If."
The "If" was the preparation of his people and the Arab world for peace. They were not ready at that
time. I was happy as I watched conditions change where he would be able to make those meetings
toward peace. I am sure it was personally satisfying for him.
No, King Hussein never reached peace in his lifetime, but he tried. I respect him for that. He truly was a
man for his time. He helped his own people while delicately balancing the concerns of the rest of the
region. Without his positive moderate influence I am convinced the world would be quite different today.
It makes one wonder if God put him there for just this reason. For those that believe in prophecy, much of
which centers around this small portion of the globe, was it God that had this man there at this time for
his purpose? If so, does his death set the stage for a fulfillment of those biblical prophecies, some of which
are scary as they describe the end of man's civilization? Will it be followed as the books say, by the
return of Jesus Christ and finally true millennial peace?
Hopefully his son, King Abdullah will be able to continue in his father's footsteps in the peace process. If
he doesn't, we may face a new millenium with even more terrorism than has marked the end of this one.
With virtually all of the middle eastern monarchs, sultans and sheiks in ill health or approaching old
age, young King Abdullah may be the first of many.
With the coming change in leadership in the middle east, the economic, political and probable military
union of Europe, the resurgence of the Catholic church under its long reigning yet aging pope, the
economic turbulence of most of the world, and the nearing of 6,000 years of man, it certainly seems the
stage is set for what God intends for the world at this time.
Are you ready for a new millenium?