Mr. Speaker, and fellow members, Canadians, the entire international community and the people of Jordan are grieving over the loss of His Majesty King Hussein.
Seldom in the years since the second world war have we seen in one person, one statesman, the qualities of true greatness possessed by Jordan's long serving leader.
The people of Jordan whatever their background owed much to King Hussein. He brought his country into the modern world. He encouraged the emergence of democratic institutions and made human rights a priority. He ruled with a gentle hand, granting successive waves of Palestinian refugees a home in Jordan where they built new lives and were extended the privileges of Jordanian nationality.
Most of all, King Hussein will be mourned and his memory honoured for the steps that he personally took over many years to find a just and equitable peace in the Middle East. He believed and understood that Israel and its Arab neighbours needed to find a way to live side by side in peace. This was never an easy task when distrust and suspicions were everywhere, wounds were deeply felt and old hatreds difficult to overcome. But King Hussein persisted despite opposition from many of his neighbours.
At each crucial stage in the peace process of recent years he played a key role. He was on the White House lawn beside Yitzhak Rabin in July 1994. Three months later he formally brought hostilities between Jordan and Israel to an end. Most recently, although gravely ill, he left his hospital bed to help forge the Wye accord between Israel and the PLO.
His compassion for the suffering and misfortunes of others was legendary. Who can forget his moving tribute at the funeral of Prime Minister Rabin, or the day he knelt to beg forgiveness of the Israeli mothers whose children had been killed by a Jordanian soldier in a fit of madness.
Canadians will recall King Hussein's various visits to Canada, the last of these in March 1995.
As a firm ally of his country, Canada was always prepared to provide moral and material support to his peace efforts.
Jordan's king will be sadly missed and not soon forgotten by his country, in the Middle East, in Canada and indeed throughout the international community.
On behalf of the Government of Canada, I wish to express our deepest sympathies to his wife, Queen Noor, his family and the Jordanian people as a whole.
To his successor, King Abdullah, I wish to pledge Canada's support as he takes up the difficult task of continuing to foster peace in this troubled region.