[1] Lozi studied at the Teachers Training College in Baghdad, Iraq, receiving a degree in literature in 1950.
[3] As head of the royal protocol he accompanied King Hussein of Jordan on a world tour between February and May 1959.
[4] After work as chief protocol for five years, in 1961, he was elected to the House of Representatives for the district of Amman.
[8] Concerning the democratization of Jordan in the 1990s he said that: "on the whole, I don't think that even the Prophets Jesus or Muhammed could bring about a faster movement toward democracy".
[2][10] Lozi said the intended goal of the committee was to make it "more responsive to change and to the development of the democratic process".
[11] In June 2014 Lozi opened the Habes Al Majali Museum on Army Day.
[12] In August 2014 public figures, including King Abdullah II of Jordan met at Lozi's Amman house to talk about challenges to the Jordanian state.
[13][14] Abdul Karim al-Kabariti, who served as Prime Minister of Jordan from February 1996 to March 1997 is the son-in-law of Lozi.