Royal visit: lots of flowers, cheers and baby gifts



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Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Susbad, hug five-year-old Luke Vincent after arriving at Dubbo Airport, Dubbo, Australia

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There were a lot of flowers.

There was a lot of cheers. There were many gifts for the expected baby, whose announcement marked the beginning of the tour.

There were hostels in grbad skirts and men with tongue out.

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There were many women and young people that the couple wants to grow.

And there were speeches and unveilings and cakes (a cook by Meghan), meetings with prime ministers, wreath laying and war memorials.

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Legend of the mediaThe prince opened his speech in Auckland by greeting the public in six languages

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During a whole question remained unresolved.

What are these royal visits for?

In the 50s, after the coronation of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, they traveled through Australia by train. It was an exhausting journey.

They visited the big cities and stopped or crossed small towns across the vast country. And we think that three quarters of the population saw them in the flesh.

  • The best pictures of the first tour of Harry and Meghan

At the time, before televisions were common, a royal tour allowed the people to see their sovereign, for the first time, beyond the black and white images of newspapers and magazines.

And at a time when global celebrity really did not exist, let alone sources powered on Instagram and Twitter, a royal visit was a gigantic event.

When the Queen traveled to Paris in 1957, the number of people who tried to get closer was such, the newspapers reported that the crowds had been repulsed by soldiers unsheathed.

There was a smell of that without the swords in Fiji and Tonga.

Thousands of people have taken the road to Fiji's airport along the roads, their one-story houses with corrugated iron roofs serving as a backdrop to the popular adulation that most locals of the world have given up.

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In Tonga, a two-day national holiday was declared for the 24 hours of the royal visit and schoolchildren charted the path that leads to Nuku's alofa, their bright uniforms detaching from the vegetation that overlooks them.

Few celebrities travel to Fiji or Tonga, although both countries are beautiful. So, a royal tour is a big problem.

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And both in Australia and New Zealand, far apart from each other, it is quite an event to visit such famous people and do things in public.

"We do not have many celebrities at home," said an Australian friend in London before the trip. "It will be a big problem."

And it was so.

On the Australian beach of Bondi, the crowds were formed from six in the morning.

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Outside the War Memorial National Park in Wellington, a curious place to walk, thousands of people stood in cold winds to catch a glimpse of or catch a few words from the couple.

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But when you talk to people in the crowd about why they have waited for hours in front of a security fence, loyalty to the Crown or its interest in the Crown is rarely mentioned.

"Curiosity." "Celebrity Landmarks." "My mother was coming." This kind of comment was pretty common.

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Heritage 'n' Hollywood is it what the House of Windsor has become?

No, because this trip was not limited to walks that visibly energize Harry and that Meghan is so good at.

There was the Invictus Games in Sydney, the sports competition for wounded veterans that Harry created and defended.

Harry opened and closed the Games and spoke of a generation of Invictus men and women who were not to complain about their wounds but who, instead, were a source of inspiration to us all, at a time of division and acrimony.

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There were countless smaller, often unreported, events that charities defended, a shower of royal sparks rewarding long years of flawless service to others.

Harry's pbadion for frankness with mental health issues, whether it's with veterans of the military or Australian farmers struggling with drought.

This is not a particularly fashionable cause. But he dislikes and badures that he is highlighted stop after stop.

And there were the hesitant steps of Meghan in the arena of women's empowerment. She did not talk much about this tour. Often, she looked like a return to another era, the respectful woman walking behind the royal husband.

But when she did, we had an idea of ​​the types of causes that she will gradually solve herself.

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Legend of the mediaMeghan's message on women's empowerment

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And potential pitfalls have also appeared.

While Harry is thrilled by the crowd on city tours, he is often visibly bored at ceremonies and has not yet found a way to hide him.

It's amazing to see him making his way through events that people spend time and care on.

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And more than once, Meghan alone and with Harry by his side – made his way through opportunities that took him a little longer.

People have come a long way and have been waiting a long time in Fiji and Tonga to see her and them. During a few events, many were disappointed.

And there is undisguised aversion to Harry for the media. He often gives the impression that he would prefer to make a tour like the one that just happened without the press and the broadcasters present.

But like politicians in the pay of the public, modern royalty, when she is at work, wants to be open and responsible. And that means accessible too.

Because that's what these tours are: the work.

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And it is a job that members of the Royal Family do extraordinarily well: quiet diplomacy, the projection of British culture and heritage that brings goodwill, tourism and the promotion of British values.

There is no substitute.

Neither the prime ministers, nor the pop stars, nor the footballers could muster the crowds and causes that Harry and Meghan had made during this long tour in four countries.

That was, few will disagree, a job well done.

Highlights of the tour

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Legend of the mediaPrince Harry met children with his wife, the Duchess of Susbad
  • The Duke and Duchess of Susbad began their tour by announcing that they were expecting their first child with a set of baby gifts, including a stuffed kangaroo, with joey, and Ugg leather boots from Australian Governor General Sir Peter Cosgrove, and his wife Lynn
  • The couple spent a lot of time meeting the crowds who met up to meet them, and there is one whose memorable beard breaks the protocol rubs and hugs the arms of a five-year-old boy to Dubbo, Australia.
  • And a woman from Christchurch, New Zealand, told how she had waited seven hours to meet the Duchess, who she said had supported her in the fight against mental health by talking to her on Instagram.
  • Prince Harry congratulated competitors at Invictus Games for turning the mental health problem "from a sad story into an inspiring story"

  • In Fiji, the Duchess spoke of the importance for women to go to university and in Tonga she seemed to have a laugh while watching a school children show.
  • The couple took part in activities during their tour, Meghan showing his impressive bravo skills in New Zealand

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