Prince Charles and his sons Prince William and Prince Harry (left) viewing the floral tributes to their mother, Diana, at the entrance of Kensington Palace in London on Sept 5, 1997. William and Harry doing the same on the eve of their mother’s 20th death anniversary on Wednesday.—AFP
Prince Charles and his sons Prince William and Prince Harry (left) viewing the floral tributes to their mother, Diana, at the entrance of Kensington Palace in London on Sept 5, 1997. William and Harry doing the same on the eve of their mother’s 20th death anniversary on Wednesday.—AFP

LONDON: Princes William and Harry paid tribute to their late mother Princess Diana on Wednesday for the 20th anniversary of her death as wellwishers left candles and flowers outside the gates of her former London residence. The princes inspected the dozens of bouquets left in front of Kensington Palace, before Harry laid his own floral tribute, given to him by a member of the public.

Handwritten notes on other bouquets read: “Diana, a brave princess, your sons have your courage” and “our country was so very lucky to have you”. “I was so sad,” recalled a tearful Lena Pettersson, a cleaner from Sweden who had travelled to London for the commemorations. “She cared about people, she was very special. Her sons are continuing her work, they are just like her.”

Pictures were left of Diana, her children and grandchildren while hardcore fans of the late princess brought a cake bearing her likeness on Tuesday. “It doesn’t matter now or in say 100 years, it will still be the same kinds of feelings towards her, in a really good way,” said Australian tourist Clint Wilde.

William and Harry earlier braved torrential rain to visit Diana’s memorial garden at the palace, touring the White Garden inspired by the princess’s life.

They then met with representatives from the charities she supported, including those helping AIDS sufferers and children in need.

Diana’s untimely death two decades ago on Thursday shocked the world. “She was this ray of light in a fairly grey world,” 35-year-old William, her eldest son and second in line to the throne, said in a new documentary for the anniversary.

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 Aug 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. No public events are planned for Thursday.

The tributes outside Kensington Palace were 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” wave of public mourning among people who didn’t 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.

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.

With all her mistakes and frailties played out in public, Britons felt wrapped up in Diana’s life and the complexity in her character still fascinates.

A testament to her enduring impact, British newspapers have been filled this month with special pull-outs and magazine articles covering all facets of Diana’s life.

William has said he tells his children, Prince George, four, and Princess Charlotte, two, about the Granny Diana they will never meet.

“When you have something so traumatic as the death of your mother when you’re 15, it will either make or break you,” William said in the Diana, 7 Days BBC documentary. “And I wouldn’t let it break me.”

Published in Dawn, August 31st, 2017

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