The late Princess Diana, also referred to as the People’s Princess, was adored by millions of people. She was a special person who captured the hearts of many with her unplanned behavior and empathy for everyone in her vicinity, regardless of wealth or age.
This remarkable woman gained notoriety after she became engaged to Prince Charles, the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and the heir apparent to the British monarchy, who is currently King Charles. Since the world found out about her existence, she has been continuously monitored. Many people think that the paparazzi’s relentless pursuit of her led to her untimely demise.
As a devoted mother, Lady Di would stop at nothing to ensure the happiness of her two sons, Prince William and Prince Harry. She broke tradition and played school games with other parents, demonstrating that her kids were her first priority and even more important than following royal protocol.
She was escaping the paparazzi on August 27, 1997, the day she passed unexpectedly.
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One of these was a trip to the Taj Mahal, yet the famous picture later caused conflicting feelings.
Regretfully, Diana passed away in a car crash a few months after this famous picture was taken.
There were whispers going around that Diana and Charles’ marriage was failing when they were on holiday in India. It was assumed that even with conflicting schedules and responsibilities, they would go see the Taj Mahal together. But as we now know, it didn’t happen.
“We were uncertain about Princess Diana’s attendance. She held us up for quite a while, Anwar Hussein said to People. “That place was extremely hot.” She was dejected, and she knew how the tale would end. She was incredibly astute. She appeared to be thinking about something when more photos were taken of her that day on a different bench.
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“It was a fascinating experience – very healing,” Lady Di remarked of her visit to the mausoleum at the time. Reporters wanted more details, so they pressed her for them. With a smirk on her face, she replied: “Work it out for yourself.”
Some dubbed this famous photo “broken hearts” despite how breathtakingly gorgeous she seemed in it.
“That picture of her as a lonely, neglected, beautiful girl who didn’t have anyone to love her back just broke everybody’s hearts,” royal biographer and writer Tina Brown said in the CNN documentary series The Windsors: Inside the Royal Dynasty.
“She understood what she was doing. And it drove Charles insane.”
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The photograph became a symbol of the beginning of the collapse of Charles and Diana’s marriage, despite Diana’s initial reluctance to take it.
Princess Diana isn’t the only princess to have snapped a photo in front of the Taj Mahal. During a visit to India in 2016, Prince William and Kate Middleton posed at the same location.
“The Duke of Cambridge is, of course, aware of the huge esteem his mother, the late Princess of Wales, is held in India, and he appreciates the iconic status of the images of the princess that exist at the Taj,” the Prince’s spokesman said at the time.
“He feels incredibly lucky to visit a place where his mother’s memory is kept alive by so many who travel there.”
However, when Meghan was about to travel to India while she and Harry dated, he asked her not to pose in front of the famous building. Have not been aware of Harry’s late mother’s iconic photo, Meghan was baffled by his request.
“‘Do not take a photo in front of the Taj Mahal.’ She’d asked why and I’d said: ‘My mum.’ I’d explained that my mother had posed for a photo there, and it had become iconic, and I didn’t want anyone thinking Meg was trying to mimic my mother,” Harry wrote in his book Spare. “Meg had never heard of this photo, and found the whole thing baffling, and I loved her for being baffled.”
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In Spare, Harry also wrote about his mother’s loss and how that affected him.
“Everyone knows where they were and what they were doing the night my mother passed away,” Harry stated.
“I cried once, at the burial, and you know I go into detail about how strange it was and how actually there was some guilt that I felt and I think William felt as well, by walking around the outside of Kensington Palace.”
“There were 50,000 bouquets of flowers to our mother and there we were shaking people’s hands, smiling,” he continued. “I’ve seen the videos, right, I looked back over it all. And the wet hands that we were shaking, we couldn’t understand why their hands were wet, but it was all the tears that they were wiping away.”
Harry and William, at 12 and 15, marched behind their mother’s coffin. Harry then condemned the Palace’s choice.