Three Lawyers. Three Opinions. Endless Conversation.
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
THE ROYAL FAMILY’S DIRTY LAUNDRY MOMENT: MEGHAN, HARRY, OPRAH, AND RACE
Ordinarily, we wouldn’t post about an
Oprah Winfrey
interview with British royals. We concern
ourselves, though, with
issues that reflect what’s happening in society and that people care about. Seventeen
million viewers watched the recent CBS
interview, American television’s second largest non-sporting event audience this
year. Eleven million people in the United Kingdom saw the interview. So, Winfrey’s interview
with Prince Harry
and his wife, Meghan
Markle, caught our attention. The interview left the royal family with
tough questions that deserve answers. Buckingham Palace
put out a statement a few days later saying the royal family would address the
issues the interview raised “privately.”
The interview left many disappointed and feeling the western world lost
another opportunity for putting racial animus behind us.
contemplate suicide. She said she reached out for help with her
mental distress but was told she shouldn’t expect assistance. She said royal
family members didn’t want her then unborn son holding a title or having the
security arrangements royals typically receive. Unidentified family members
expressed “concerns” about how dark his skin might be. Markle and her husband
wouldn’t say who raised the “concerns,” though
Harry denied it was either of
his grandparents, Queen
Elizabeth II or her husband, the ailing Prince Philip.
Rampant speculation about who it was consumed the British and American media.
The UK and the One Drop
Rule
From the time Harry and Meghan began
dating in
2016, British tabloids were fascinated (repulsed?) by the idea of an
English royal involved in a romance with a person of color. Some weren’t nice
about it. Meghan almost certainly carries more white than black ancestry. Her
father, Thomas
Markle,
is a white man. The world views her mother, Doria Ragland, as black,
though her skin tone and other features suggest some European ancestry. Meghan,
therefore, in the eyes of many, is black because of the “one drop rule.”
In
order to prevent the offspring of enslaved women and white masters from
claiming inheritance rights through their biological fathers,
many American states enforced two provisions in probate and family law. First, children carried the racial status of
their mothers. Second, the presence of any black ancestry made a person legally
black – the one drop rule.
England never had such laws, but the custom apparently
followed Meghan into her relationship with Harry. Seemingly that view held sway
with some members of the royal family who weren’t hesitant about expressing
themselves.
Meghan’s distress has now caused all kinds ofproblems. The British Commonwealth
includes nations with lots of people of color. Many embraced Meghan. For them,
the royal family’s behavior has been a supreme disappointment and bolstered the
push in some countries for ending ties with the monarchy.
Is This Really
Happening?
“Concern” about the
skin color of a royal family member’s child in the 21st century indicates
the world hasn’t changed as much as we might have hoped. It may mean Britain has
racial problems not much different from those in the United States. The
controversy suggests Meghan and Harry’s marriage now represents a lost
opportunity.
Interracial marriage
isn’t unusual anymore. The statistics tell a clear enough story. Rates of intermarriage among blacks in the
United States doubled between 1980 and 2010
and keep rising. Beyond the numbers, just watch television or shop in a bookstore.
Interracial couples and their children appear in commercials for banks, food
products, cars, skin disease treatments, furniture, even erectile dysfunction
medications. Novels about interracial romances flood bookstore shelves.
Perhaps the idea of a British royal in an interracial marriage was too much, despite changing attitudes. As a friend of one of us
says about the royal family and its notions of what’s acceptable and what’s
not, the royals follow a rule that says, “That’s different!”
Mason,
provided the featured music. We thought the inclusivity of the wedding portended
a more tolerant era, one that could help England and the everyone else put
racial animus further in the rear-view mirror.
The mistreatment Meghan received, behavior that led her and
Harry to flee the United Kingdom for
California and life outside the royal bubble, suggests the bright promise of a new
world we saw was an illusion. Things haven’t changed as we thought. The British
have their own version of the racial insensitivity and backward thinking we see
so much of in the United States.
Perhaps there’s no reason for surprise. We wondered how that 2018
ceremony struck some members of the royal family. One of us got a text from a
relative wondering if the wedding “stretched British stiff upper lips to their
snapping point.” Now it appears those
fears may have been realized. Perhaps the way the wedding --- and the marriage
itself – struck some royals was a version of the idea another of our friends
expresses when he sees white people unhappy about some indicator of racial
progress. He exclaims, “We can’t have that!”
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