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Royals
remember Princess Diana 10 years after death
LONDON—Royals and celebrities joined Princes William and Harry to honor
their mother Princess Diana on Friday, the 10th anniversary of her death
in a high-speed limousine crash in Paris.
Hundreds of mourners lined the streets outside a chapel near Buckingham
Palace where the Queen, Diana’s ex-husband Prince Charles, her brother
Charles Spencer and other royals and celebrities gathered for the
memorial service. Paying their own tribute, members of the public
attached flowers, photographs and messages to the gates of Kensington
Palace, her London residence, although in far fewer numbers than a
decade ago.
Then a vast outpouring of grief stunned Britain almost as much as her
death whereas now, many Britons feel the public display of sorrow 10
years ago was over-the-top. Both Princes William and Harry addressed the
500-strong congregation, recalling their mother’s warmth and charisma.
“William and I can separate life into two parts. There were those years
when we were blessed with the physical presence beside us of both our
mother and father,” Harry said. “And then there are the 10 years since
our mother’s death. When she was alive we completely took for granted
her unrivalled love of life, laughter, fun and folly. She was our
guardian, friend and protector.”
“She will always be remembered for her amazing public work. But behind
the media glare, to us, just two loving children, she was quite simply
the best mother in the world.” In Paris, where she died in the early
hours of August 31, 1997, alongside her boyfriend, Dodi al-Fayed,
following a crash in a tunnel, small crowds of mourners gathered to lay
flowers and leave wreaths at the scene of the incident.
“I loved the princess before her death and even more after,” said
mourner Dominique de Fontenay. “She did great things for the people and
was glamorous, and a symbol of modernity.” Prince Charles’ second wife,
Camilla, with whom he had an affair while still married to Diana and
whom Diana referred to as “The Rottweiler,” did not attend the memorial
service to avoid controversy, although she was invited.
Dubbed the “People’s Princess” following her death, aged 36, Diana was
adored by millions of people who never met her but who contrasted her
charisma with what they viewed as a stuffy and hidebound royal family.
The emotional outpouring when she died led many commentators to question
how long the monarchy might endure without her, but 10 years on it
appears as solid an institution as ever.
In a sign that perhaps, with hindsight, Britons feel that they may have
overdone the grieving over Diana’s death, a survey conducted by Sky News
on Friday showed that 55 percent of people thought the mourning had been
excessive. And in comments posted on the BBC’s website, not all of the
public was enamored by the 10th anniversary service.
“For all those people still mourning the loss of Diana — has nothing
happened in your life in the past 10 years that you still have to cling
to her? I suggest you all have a reality check and get on with life,”
wrote Eliza in London.
Among the absentees at the service was Dodi’s father, Egyptian-born
Mohammed al-Fayed. Al-Fayed, owner of the luxury London store Harrods,
accuses Britain’s royal family of ordering the couple’s murder to
prevent them from marrying.—Agencies
Despite comprehensive police inquiries ruling out foul play, some
Britons share al-Fayed’s suspicions that the deaths were not an
accident. An official inquest into the deaths will begin on October 2,
propelling Diana into the headlines once again.
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