The Sun newspaper has sparked a furor in Britain by releasing
decades-old footage of Queen Elizabeth II -- then a young girl -- giving a Nazi
salute as she played with her family.
Buckingham
Palace criticized the newspaper's decision to publish on its website the
private family film, which was shot around 1933, when the future Queen was only
about 6 years old and as Adolf Hitler had just risen to power in Germany.
"It is
disappointing that film, shot eight decades ago and apparently from (Her
Majesty's) personal family archive, has been obtained and exploited in this
manner," a Buckingham Palace spokesman said.
The print
version of the Sun, Britain's best-selling tabloid newspaper, published a still
image taken from the footage --
showing Elizabeth alongside her mother, her 3-year-old sister Princess Margaret
and her uncle, who would later be crowned Edward VIII -- on its front page with
the headline, "Their royal heilnesses."
The short
black-and-white clip, filmed at the royals' Balmoral estate in Scotland, shows
Edward -- whom the paper describes as "Nazi-sympathising" --
apparently encouraging his young nieces and sister-in-law to perform the
salute, before himself joining them.
"While
there is clearly no suggestion that the Queen or Queen Mother were ever Nazi
sympathisers, Edward's links with Hitler and fascism are very well
documented," the article says.
The Sun also
quotes a historian, Karina Urbach of the London-based Institute of
Historical Research, as describing the footage as "an important
historical document that asks serious questions of the Royal Family."
Source: Queen was entirely innocent of gesture's meaning
Edward would subsequently go on to meet
with Hitler in Germany in 1937, a year after he abdicated the throne in order
to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson, leading to Elizabeth's father's
ascension as King George VI.
It's not clear
who was filming the 17-second segment of grainy footage posted on The Sun's
website. Nor does the newspaper say who provided what it says is a copy of the
original film, made several years ago.
A royal source
said: "Most people will see these pictures in their proper context and
time. This is a family playing and momentarily referencing a gesture many would
have seen from contemporary news reels.
"No one at
that time had any sense how it would evolve. To imply anything else is
misleading and dishonest."
The Queen was
about 6 years old at the time, the source said, and "entirely innocent of
attaching any meaning to these gestures."
The Queen and
her family's service to the nation during World War II and the 63 years of her
reign she has spent "building relations between nations and peoples speaks
for itself," the source added.
Hitler was
appointed chancellor of a coalition government early in 1933, and the National
Socialists had been rapidly and ruthlessly consolidating their power over the
government and the population that year. However, many outside Germany hadn't
yet come to see Nazism as a threat.
The Sun: Images give fascinating insight
The Sun also published a separate
explanation of why it
decided to run the footage, saying the images must be seen in their historical
context.
"These
images have lain hidden for 82 years. We publish them today, knowing they do
not reflect badly on our Queen, her late sister or mother in any way," it
said.
"They do,
however, provide a fascinating insight into the warped prejudices of Edward
VIII and his friends in that bleak, paranoid, tumultuous decade."
Elizabeth
ascended to the throne in 1952 following the death of her father.
She paid her first state visit to Germany in June, accompanied by husband Prince
Philip. The trip culminated with a visit to the site of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp,
where Anne Frank died, and which was liberated by British troops 70 years ago.
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