The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Prince Philip was ‘one of us’, says minister of Crathie Kirk

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The minister of the church used by the royal family when at Balmoral Castle has laid claim to the Duke of Edinburgh being “one of us” in the north east of Scotland.

Reverend Kenneth MacKenzie is the minister of the Parish of Braemar and Crathie and domestic chaplain to the Queen, who visits the church for Sunday services with members of her family when staying at the castle.

Ahead of the duke’s funeral today, Rev MacKenzie paid tribute to him and highlighte­d just how many communitie­s across the country, and the world, had an affinity with the 99-year-old.

He said: “Over the last few days, many different tribes and nations have, with some justificat­ion, laid claim to the duke, and while I seek no argument with those who claim that he was ‘thoroughly European’, ‘archetypic­ally British’, ‘adopted by the Commonweal­th’, ‘Baptised Orthodox’, ‘Confirmed Anglican’ or whatever – let me try to set the record straight.

“I think HRH The Duke of Edinburgh was one of us.

“I make this claim on behalf of those who live in the north east of Scotland, where early on, the duke famously received a formal education, and where, by his own acknowledg­ment, he would later learn even more by walking in the footsteps of those who loved and cared for the land and forests of Upper Deeside.

“At the risk of sounding even more ‘parochial’, I make my ‘one of us’ assertion as a person who serves in a local church.

“A man of faith with an active and enquiring mind, the duke was always interested in the church at the national and institutio­nal level – keeping up to date with the decisions and discussion­s of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland – but his interest did not stop there.

“He was never slow to question how this ‘so-called faith’ was being lived out in any given parish and community – and speaking for myself, I loved him for it.”

Rev MacKenzie, minister of the parish since 2005, previously told how highly regarded Philip’s work and interest in the community was.

This included the duke knowing people around the Balmoral estate and “not just their parents but grandparen­ts” too.

Students at the school the Duke of Edinburgh attended, Gordonstou­n in Moray, took part in an early morning run yesterday in tribute to him.

More than 100 students and staff, in household groups, ran a 3.5km route from Gordonstou­n House to the nearby coastguard watchtower which Philip reopened in 1955.

The school’s young sailors will today lay a wreath at sea off Hopeman Harbour in Moray from the school yacht, while a lone student piper plays.

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