Buckingham Palace
expressed its disappointment Saturday with a tabloid newspaper for publishing
images of a young Queen Elizabeth II performing a Nazi salute with her family
in 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came to power.
The
palace took the unusual step of commenting on the report in The Sun newspaper,
which shows the queen — then about 7 years old — at the family home in
Balmoral, with her uncle Edward, mother and sister. The grainy footage also
shows Elizabeth's mother making the salute as the family laughs.
AP report continues:
"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,"
the palace said.
The
images, posted on the newspaper's website under the headline "Their Royal
Heilnesses," shows the young girls prancing on the grass. A dog runs
underfoot. The girls jump up and down.
Military
historian James Holland told The Sun that the royals were joking.
"I
don't think there was a child in Britain in the 1930s or '40s who has not
performed a mock Nazi salute as a bit of a lark," he was quoted as saying.
The
queen's former press secretary, Dickie Arbiter, said the royals would be
relaxed about the release of the film given the context in which it was shot —
and given that the monarch's parents took a fierce anti-Nazi stand during World
War II. But he said they would be angry about how the newspaper obtained what
is essentially a home movie.
He
also noted that the true extent of Nazism's evils became known only later.
The
Sun's managing editor, Stig Abell, said the footage was obtained legitimately.
He told the BBC that the story was "not a criticism of the queen or the
Queen Mum."
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