Yorkshire Post

The day her people grieved for their princess

A short, sad appearance in the rain by the sons she left behind marks 20th anniversar­y of Diana’s death

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WAS the biggest outpouring of grief Britain had seen since the death of Churchill, 32 years earlier.

A midnight car crash in Paris, exactly 20 years ago, had set in motion a chain of events that changed not only the Royal Family but Britain itself.

Yesterday, the skies darkened once more as the sons Diana, Princess of Wales, left behind, marked the anniversar­y of her death.

Beneath torrential rain, in the grounds of her former home, Kensington Pace, Princes William and Harry spent an hour touring a memorial space planted in her honour with white flowers.

Outside the gates, well-wishers began leaving floral tributes and pictures of the princess, just as they had two decades earlier.

Time had softened the shock but not the sadness. “All of us lost somebody,” Harry observed.

It was at 11 on Sunday morning that Tony Blair, the Prime Minister of four months, emerged from 10 Downing Street to confirm the death of the people’s princess, as he called her.

Diana had died at four that morning, three-and-a-half hours after she and her boyfriend, Dodi Fayed, had set off from the Ritz Hotel, their limousine pursued by paparazzi.

A few hours later, the Kensington Palace grounds were a sea of flowers, and sorrow.

The emotion was still palpable yesterday as William and Harry, accompanie­d by William’s wife, Kate, the standard-bearers for a new generation of royals, sheltered under umbrellas.

The princes had spoken candidly about their mother on TV. “There’s not a day that William and I don’t wish that she was still around,” Harry said.

He was 12 when his mother died, William 15.

At her funeral, millions wept for them as they walked behind the horse-drawn gun carriage that transporte­d the coffin through London.

“I don’t think any child should be asked to do that, under any circumstan­ces,” Harry said. “I don’t think it would happen today.”

The Queen and Prince Charles had issued only a short statement in the immediate aftermath. The tragedy, and the reaction to it, marked the end of reverence, a wake-up call to the family and the way it conducted its relationsh­ip with the nation.

William has said he felt “very angry” about his mother’s death. “I find talking about my mother and keeping her memory alive very important,” he said.

There will be no public service today. The princes chose to mark the date of her birth, not her death, and on July 1 they attended a small, private service to rededicate her grave, on a private island in a lake at her family’s ancestral home at Althorp House, Northampto­nshire. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, officiated.

The Diana Award, a charity establishe­d to promote the princess’s belief in the positive power of young people, is staging a year-long celebratio­n, and in May, William and Harry presented its inaugural Legacy Award.

Diana’s statue will be erected, possibly later this year, in the public gardens of Kensington Palace. The brothers said: “Our mother touched so many lives. We hope the statue will help all those who visit to reflect on her life and her legacy.”

I find keeping my mother’s memory alive very important. The Duke of Cambridge.

 ?? PICTURES: KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/PA ?? SADNESS: William and Harry tour the memorial space left in memory of their mother, Diana; the princes were accompaned by William’s wife, Kate.
PICTURES: KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/PA SADNESS: William and Harry tour the memorial space left in memory of their mother, Diana; the princes were accompaned by William’s wife, Kate.

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