Regardless of nationality, all couples are required to apply and qualify to become prospective foster parents with the appropriate section of the MSD. The pre-qualification process is similar to those in the U.S. and includes, among other steps, a home-study and visit, interviews by the MSD social workers, financial statements, medical certificates verifying that both prospective parents are infertile. A MSD committee reviews the results, and if conditions are met and legal, the Minister of Social Development issues his/her approval.
Those couples who qualify and meet all legal and social requirements set forth by the GOJ and the MSD, are escorted to a government-run orphanage to chose from children whose parents are unknown. Under Islam, no child may be put up for "adoption" if one or both parents or a relative (however distant) is known. Therefore, the only children couples may select are those for whom there are no known parents or relatives. An abandoned child, who is the responsibility of the GOJ and the MSD, is placed and cared-for in a MSD orphanage.
According to the precepts of Islam and the laws of the GOJ governing
the "adoption" of abandoned infants, the foster parents are permitted to
choose the first name of the abandoned child. The GOJ’s Ministry
of Interior, Civil Status (Affairs) Registry Office, chooses four (4) fictitious
name for the mother and father, which along with the first are placed on
the child’s Jordanian birth certificate. Parent’s names, which are
chosen at random and do not identify with any common Jordanian family or
tribal names, are required for issuance of a Jordanian birth certificates.
The child, per Jordanian law, will carry the names of the fictitious father.
Once a birth certificate has been issued, the child is also issued a GOJ
“Family Book” and a Jordanian Passport.