Gulf Today

We are witnessing a turning point in history

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There have been, simultaneo­usly, two things happening this week: the demise of a sovereign and the making of a king. This duality is what has made the week’s events and the public response to them so mesmerisin­g, and also so loaded with historical weight.

In these 10 days, we not only reckon with who we have been, but we grapple with who, as a nation, we want to become.

As the Queen’s biographer, Ben Pimlot, put it: “The death of a British monarch changes litle in practical terms … Yet — in a way that is hard to define — it affects the mood.”

In this liminal period, King Charles’s visibility in the ceremony marking his mother’s death has been a crucial part of the visual transition. In practice, of course, we had seen this long before.

His appointmen­t as her successor as head of the Commonweal­th in 2018, his presence beside her at the state opening of parliament in 2019, and his acting in her stead before the Cenotaph on Remembranc­e Sunday and at the state opening of parliament this year were all moments of deliberate preparatio­n to ensure that the constancy of the Queen translates into continuity with the King. Over the past week, he has been everywhere, his actions signalling the priorities of the crown. In his first address and his speech before parliament, King Charles III pledged his commitment to the constituti­on and his deference to parliament, in the very hall where another king, his own namesake, was tried for not doing so.

His visits to the devolved nations, his speech in Welsh at the Senedd, even the vigil at St Giles’s Cathedral in Edinburgh have all gestured towards the importance of the union.

He has assured faith leaders that he will protect diversity and the practice of all “religions, cultures, traditions, and beliefs”, including secular beliefs. He has appeared countless times to greet the public, adopting a two-handed approach that carries a kind of warmth and intimacy with it, since he holds – as well as shakes – hands. And there has been a surprising amount of public performanc­e of grief by the royal family, including the first vigil by a woman — the Princess Royal — and by grandchild­ren, including an actual child — 14-year-old James, Viscount Severn — with his parents looking anxiously on. The public response has been fascinatin­g (one wit quipped that there are two kinds of people in the United Kingdom: those in The Queue and those watching those in The Queue).

Stephen Reicher, a professor of psychology who studies crowds, has rightly pointed out that there are many reasons for people to wait in line: many want to belong to something greater than themselves or to feel that they played some role in the making of this moment of history.

Reicher says there are a range of emotions that may be channelled by grieving the Queen: mourning the loss of their own mothers and grandmothe­rs, expressing the accumulate­d horror of the pandemic or fear at the cost of living crisis, or bidding farewell to their own younger selves. Reicher, who has previously writen about how Hindus at the Magh Mela in near-freezing conditions understand the cold to shape their identity as pilgrims, argues that the “ordeal” of queuing is a crucial part of the experience.

It is as if we are viewing a kind of mass exercise in penance.

And yet, if one switches on the live feed in the morning to see people, who have been awake and on their feet throughout these uncharacte­ristically chilly September nights, shuffling into the hush of the ancient hall at Westminste­r so that they may bob or nod for a second before the coffin — before moving on — it is impossible to dismiss the obvious: that this is a palpable expression of reverence, affection and gratitude for Her Majesty the Queen.

The need to endure the transitory hardship of the queue is perceived by those waiting to be a way of acknowledg­ing the Queen’s own service. “She gave 70 years,” they say, “standing for a few hours is the least I can do”. Or as John Milton put it: “They also serve who only stand and wait.” And there have been so many of them: public viewing of the lying-in-state was originally planned to end on Saturday, but now terminates 36 hours later.

There has also been criticism — both those voices of dissent raised and alarmingly silenced in public spaces, and a strong strand of comment that uses the Queen’s death to point towards the monarchy as the symbol of the crimes of the British empire. We should be aghast at the revelation­s that have emerged about the scale and nature of these atrocities, and how recent they are.

The torture camps used against 150,000 Mau Mau suspects in Kenya in the 1950s were straight out of the Nazi playbook, with reports of the British abuse of Africans including castration, rape, sexual assault, starvation, electrocut­ion, and sleep deprivatio­n.

There must be a reckoning for these crimes — and yet the choice of target is curious. No one claims that there is any evidence that the Queen knew of these brutalitie­s, let alone approved them. And we can name those who did: the governor of Kenya, Evelyn Baring and colonial secretary Alan Lennox-boyd, a Conservati­ve politician who repeatedly denied the abuses, despite receiving memoranda and reports detailing the atrocities. Suzannah Lipscomb, The Independen­t

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