Leaving the royal house is apparently not an easy end for anyone, and now a royal house correspondent reveals how Meghan’s last seconds were – and her heartbreaking message.
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Reveals statement
According to Glamour spent the last days of the Duchess as a senior member of the royal family performing royal duties. After finishing a meeting with Commonwealth students, she was alone in a room at Buckingham Palace with royal house correspondent and author of the book “Finding Freedom”, Omid Scobie.
The book was written with the Duchess’ contribution. To Scobie, she is then said to have uttered what should be some of her last words as part of the royal house.
– It should not have been this way, she is said to have stated, according to Scobie.
The experienced royal reporter remembers the moment when the duchess is said to have been both “destroyed” and “upset and vulnerable”.
She stood in the middle of Buckingham Palace and knew she would never be there again as a working member of the royal family. At that moment, you realize that it was not just a difficult couple who failed to make it work. It was an entire institution that failed to take care of and protect a newcomer, he continues.
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– Tried everything they could
The author also adds that he hoped people understood that the duke couple never wanted to distance themselves from the royal family.
He then cites several examples of women who have entered the royal house, but who have met with great opposition. Both Princess Diana and Sarah Ferguson (61) received a lot of criticism after they divorced Prince Charles (72) and Prince Andrew (61), respectively.
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Duchess Kate (39) also met with great opposition from both the people and the press before she married Prince William (38). She also gave the press the nickname “Waity Katie”, because she had to wait so long to be free.
– There is a problem we see again and again: Women who marry into the royal family, and then leave them destroyed and beaten. I really believe that the treatment of women in the royal family, and newcomers, is where the problem lies, Scobie adds.