Times Colonist

From bishop to Oprah, a wedding of cultures

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK

BURLINGTON, N.J. — With a gospel choir, black cellist and bishop, Oprah, Serena and Idris Elba in the audience and an African-American mother-of-the-bride, Saturday’s wedding of Prince Harry to American actress Meghan Markle was a blend of the solemn and the soulful. Guess who’s coming to Windsor? The ceremony married the pomp and circumstan­ce of Britain’s most sacred institutio­n with elements of black culture, drawing viewers not normally drawn to the spectacle of the monarchy.

“This was black history,” said Joy Widgeon, who attended a house party in Burlington, New Jersey, with her six- and eight-year-old daughters in tow. “African Americans were front and centre at the royal wedding. This was the first time, and, hopefully, it won’t be the last. I am here for it.”

Race has loomed over the couple’s relationsh­ip from the beginning. After the pair went public in 2016, Harry lashed out in a public statement at what he described as “racial undertones” in media coverage and overt racism toward his then-girlfriend, who has lamented such views. At the announceme­nt of their engagement last fall, many black women around the world cheered the news as a fairytale that doesn’t always include them.

Markle, 36, became the first black member of the Royal Family in modern history. Her mother, Doria Ragland, is black. Her father is white.

A diverse group of about 20 — mostly black women — gathered before dawn on the rainy Saturday at a house party in Burlington, New Jersey, right outside Philadelph­ia. They were among the scores of African Americans and British Americans participat­ing in the global event in person, at home and online.

Decorated with a banner reading “Congratula­tions Harry and Meghan” and with the bride’s biography on a nearby table and glasses of tea and mimosas and the smell of breakfast cooking in the background, the guests gathered in two rooms.

“We were keen to see who was going to look like us,” said socialite David Alexander Jenkins, who has ridden horses in the same Windsor countrysid­e where the wedding was held.

As Markle emerged from the burgundy Rolls Royce that brought her to St. George’s Chapel, Paula Jackson gasped with approval. “Oh, she looks lovely! Gorgeous! Beautiful!” Jackson exclaimed, wearing a jeweled blazer and sparkling tiara, sitting on a couch with a spot marked on a note in capital letters: RESERVED FOR THE QUEEN.

“I’m just so happy for her,” Jackson said of Markle. “She will be an example for our young African-American women.”

The couple also asked the Most Rev. Bishop Michael Curry to participat­e in the ceremony. Elected the first African American to his role in the Episcopal Church in 2015, Curry is based in Chicago. His theology, rooted in social justice, was on full display Saturday, as he invoked the words of the Rev. Martin Luther King in his address to the couple and audience.

The bride called to invite 19-year-old cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason, who is black, to play at the wedding after Prince Harry saw him perform at a London event supporting an Antiguan charity. The diverse, Christian gospel group Kingdom Choir performed a stirring rendition of Ben E. King’s Stand By Me.

Sanya Brown, already a fan of the royals, initially planned to watch alone in her pyjamas, but made a last-minute decision this week to watch with a girlfriend at her house in the Philadelph­ia suburb of Wynnefield.

“In the time of the ‘black girl magic’ moment we are currently living in ... for this black girl from Los Angeles to be marrying into the Royal Family is a really dope and historic moment, so why not have that with someone and celebrate her magic?” she asked.

 ??  ?? The Most Rev. Bishop Michael Curry presides over the wedding.
The Most Rev. Bishop Michael Curry presides over the wedding.

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