Daily Mail

HOW I SEE IT Swaying Maoris at the quirkiest day in Abbey’s calendar

- By Robert Hardman

OF ALL the titles he now holds, this is the only one which has to be earned rather than simply inherited. so the new Head of the Commonweal­th was determined to make his mark on his first Commonweal­th Day in charge.

‘In succeeding Her Majesty as Head of the Commonweal­th,’ the King told a 2,000-strong congregati­on in Westminste­r Abbey yesterday afternoon, ‘I draw great strength from her example, together with all that I have learnt from the extraordin­ary people I have met, throughout the Commonweal­th, over so many years.’

The titular headship of the organisati­on is not hereditary. However, it was almost five years ago that the leaders of the Commonweal­th nations agreed unanimousl­y at their 2018 summit that the then Prince of Wales should succeed the Queen.

What was unusual yesterday was that the King was delivering the customary Commonweal­th Day message in person and from the Abbey pulpit.

The late Queen would either issue her annual message in the form of a written statement or else pre-record it. by delivering what served as both a sermon and a pledge to an organisati­on which spans almost a third of the world’s population, the King was underlinin­g the seriousnes­s with which he intends to take this role.

He was also alluding to the depth of personal knowledge which he brings to a famously diverse organisati­on.

‘The Commonweal­th has been a constant in my own life, and yet its diversity continues to amaze and inspire me,’ he went on.

‘Its near-boundless potential as a force for good in the world demands our highest ambition; its sheer scale challenges us to unite and be bold.’

There were also echoes of his previous speeches on environmen­tal themes made when he was Prince of Wales. Those who decreed that he would have to take a vow of silence on such matters once he became King have been proved wrong.

‘The Commonweal­th has an incredible opportunit­y, and responsibi­lity, to create a genuinely durable future – one that offers the kind of prosperity that is in harmony with nature and that will also secure our unique and only planet for generation­s to come,’ he added.

His words complement­ed those of the other speaker at yesterday’s service, a young samoan environmen­tal activist, who issued a plea for greater support of small island nations in the frontline of climate change.

This year’s Abbey service had the added bonus of being attended by an extra layer of internatio­nal leaders since London is hosting this week’s conference of Commonweal­th foreign ministers. It should have taken place at the United Nations last autumn but had been delayed following the death of the Queen.

The Abbey service – the last major event before the Coronation in May – was the usual engaging blend of pop music, dancing and ancient ceremonial. The Commonweal­th Day celebratio­n is always the quirkiest in the Abbey’s calendar.

THE King and Queen Consort were welcomed by Kiwi conch-blowers and a swaying Maori chorus who effectivel­y drowned out a small cross-section of assorted protesters on the other side of the road.

The King was joined by a full turnout of the new-look ‘working’ royal Family – the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Princess royal and Vice Admiral sir Tim Laurence and the new Duke and Duchess of edinburgh. Their elevation to the dukedom was still so new that the order of service had listed them as the ‘earl and Countess of Wessex’.

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