The Manila Times

Diana still captivates, 20 years on

- AFP PHOTO

LONDON: Candles and flowers are already building up at the gates of Princess Diana’s former London residence to mark 20 years since her death, which unleashed an unpreceden­ted outpouring of grief in Britain.

“She was this ray of light in a fairly gray world,” Prince William said of his mother Diana, princess of Wales, whose death two decades ago on Thursday shocked the world.

“I still feel that love, I still feel that warmth 20 years on,” her eldest son said in a new documentar­y marking the anniversar­y.

“If I can be even a fraction of what she was, I’ll be proud.”

The life of Diana—a shy, teenage aristocrat who suddenly became the world’s most famous woman—and her tragic death at 36 still captivates millions across the globe.

Two decades on, her sons William and Prince Harry only now feel able to talk publicly about her death, a seismic event which continues to resonate in the monarchy and British society.

Diana died in a car crash in Paris in the early hours of August 31, 1997, along with Dodi Fayed, her wealthy Egyptian film producer boyfriend of two months, and a drink-impaired, speeding driver Henri Paul, who was trying to evade paparazzi.

The 10th anniversar­y of her death was marked with a memorial service and a charity concert at Wembley Stadium in London.

The passing of another decade has allowed for greater perspectiv­e, and this anniversar­y has been more reflective, marked by William, 35, and Harry, 32, opening up about their mother’s life, and death.

No public events are planned for Thursday, but on Wednesday, the brothers will walk around the garden which has been especially created in her memory at Kensington Palace, her London home.

They will meet with representa­tives from charities she supported.

Flowers at the gates

Candles, bouquets of flowers and pictures from well-wishers are already building up at the palace gates, while hardcore Diana fans have turned up with a cake bearing her picture.

But the scene is nothing like the sea of flowers laid in the week between her death and her funeral: an outpouring of national grief that commentato­rs are still grappling with.

William and Harry have spoken of struggling to comprehend the “alien” tide of public mourning from people who did not know their mother, at a time when they, aged 15 and 12, could not process their loss.

Britain, the nation of the stiff upper lip, was now wailing and hurling flowers at a hearse.

A public that had lapped up every twist and turn in the life of their fairytale princess was crying for their lost icon, killed in the chase for the next day’s pictures.

Diana married Prince Charles, the heir to the throne, in 1981, but their marriage collapsed under the strains of public duty and their incompatib­ility.

The monarchy’s shining star, now a fashion icon, humanitari­an and self-styled “queen of hearts”, found herself cast out of the royal family in the 1996 divorce she did not want but had made inevitable with an unpreceden­ted and explosive television interview.

 ??  ?? BELOVED PRINCESS Visitors look at photograph­s of Diana, Princess of Wales, and floral tributes left outside Kensington Palace in Central London on Tuesday ( Wednesday in Manila) ahead of the 20th anniversar­y of Princess Diana’s death.
BELOVED PRINCESS Visitors look at photograph­s of Diana, Princess of Wales, and floral tributes left outside Kensington Palace in Central London on Tuesday ( Wednesday in Manila) ahead of the 20th anniversar­y of Princess Diana’s death.

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