The Daily Telegraph

Prince William on the public grief for Diana

- By Hannah Furness ROYAL CORRESPOND­ENT

I couldn’t understand why people were crying when they didn’t even know her

THE DUKE of Cambridge and Prince Harry have spoken of the bewilderme­nt they felt at the public grief following their mother’s death, admitting they had struggled to understand why so many strangers were crying when they “didn’t even know her”.

The Duke, who was 15 when Diana, Princess of Wales, died, said he had felt “a bit protective at times about her” as he walked behind her coffin with his brother, who was just 12.

Admitting that grieving in the public eye had been among the most difficult moments of his life, the Duke said he had wondered of weeping members of the public: “You didn’t even know her, why and how are you so upset?”

He has since come to understand how much the Princess had meant to people, he said, as he and his younger brother spoke candidly about how the watching world in 1997 affected them.

The Duke and Prince Harry spoke as part of a documentar­y for the BBC, which sees them publicly defend the decision made by the Prince of Wales and the Queen to keep them at Balmoral following the car crash that killed their mother.

It is the first time in a series of highprofil­e interviews about the Princess’s death that they have praised their father for his part in helping them grieve.

Prince Harry said: “One of the hardest things for a parent to have to do is to tell your children that your other parent has died. How you deal with that I don’t know but, you know, he was there for us. He was the one out of two left and he tried to do his best and to make sure we were protected and looked after. But, you know, he was going through the same grieving process.”

The Queen weathered heavy criticism from a public that accused the Royal family of keeping the children “prisoner” and away from the people following Diana’s death on Aug 31 1997. However, the Duke said: “I don’t think anyone, even my grandmothe­r, had seen anything like this before. I think all of us were on new territory.

“But for Harry and I, my grandmothe­r and father believed we were better served at Balmoral, having the walks and the space and peace to be with the family and not be immersed having to deal with serious decisions or worries straight away.

“I think it was a very hard decision for my grandmothe­r to make. She felt very torn between being a grandmothe­r ... and her Queen role.”

Saying he was thankful there had been no smartphone­s to keep them updated in London, he added: “We had the privacy to mourn and collect our thoughts, and have that space.”

Lady Sarah Mccorquoda­le, Diana’s sister, added of the Queen’s decision: “She did absolutely the right thing. If I was her I would have done that.”

In contrast to the peace of Balmoral, the streets of London were lined with people overcome with emotion.

The weight of public expectatio­n placed upon the young Princes required them to put on a “game face” in order to avoid “completely and utterly breaking down”, the Duke added.

Describing coming back to London to meet the public, the Duke said: “What was very peculiar but obviously incredibly touching was everybody crying … and people wanting to touch us … it was like nothing you can really describe.”

In hindsight, Prince Harry said he was glad he had walked behind the Princess’s coffin, saying he had wanted to make her proud.

He added: “The way that people were grabbing us and pulling us into their arms… I don’t blame anybody for that, of course I don’t, but it was those moments that were quite shocking.”

The Duke added: “When you have something so traumatic as the death of your mother when you’re 15, it will either make or break you. I wouldn’t let it break me, I wanted it to make me.” ‘Diana, 7 Days’ will be broadcast this Sunday at 7.30pm on BBC One.

‘One of the hardest things for a parent to have to do is to tell your children that your other parent has died’

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 ??  ?? William and Harry: defending their father and grandmothe­r in a BBC documentar­y
William and Harry: defending their father and grandmothe­r in a BBC documentar­y
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