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Diana, Princess of Wales

492 bytes added, 05:50, March 16, 2023
Despite being in the [[atheist]]ic, [[pro-abortion]] culture of [[Britain]], there are strong indications that Princess Diana was [[pro-life]]
She married Prince Charles on 1981 at St. Paul's Cathedral, [[London]], and gave birth to Prince William in 1982 and Prince Harry in 1984. However, the marriage was troubled (both parties were accused of marital infidelity; a recurring rumor is that Prince Charles is not Prince Harry's biological father) and the couple separated in 1992; they divorced in 1996.
 
==Pro-life==
Despite being in the [[atheist]]ic, [[pro-abortion]] culture of [[Britain]], there are strong indications that Princess Diana was [[pro-life]]:
*she was very good friends with the pro-life leader [[Mother Teresa]], and admired her immensely;
*widespread speculation is that her second child, Harry, was the result of an affair, yet Diana chose not to abort; and
*further speculation is that she was pregnant when she died while planning to marry an [[Egypt]]ian.
==Death==
[[Image:Ritz.jpg|right|Hôtel Ritz Paris]]
In 1997 Diana was holidaying with Dodi Fayed, son of the controversial businessman [[Mohammed al Fayed]]. On 31 August the couple dined at the Ritz Hotel (owned by al-Fayed) before leaving by car for Dodi Fayed's Paris apartment. While traveling at speed (eluding the paparazzi) through the Pont d'Alma underpass, their car crashed. Dodi Fayed (42) and the driver, Henri Paul (41), were killed instantly; Diana (36) died some hours later in hospital; a bodyguard survived. It was later found that Paul was over the blood alcohol limit for driving. Despite this, [[Conspiracy theory|conspiracy theories]] have flourished about the incident, the most flamboyant being that the [[Duke of Edinburgh]] ordered the British security service [[MI5]] to have Diana and Dodi murdered, to prevent her giving birth to a [[Islam|Moslem]] child (though there is speculation that she was not pregnant at the time of her death). Such theories are fostered by Mohammed al-Fayed and by the British daily newspaper the [[Daily Express]].
"Lady Di," as she was often popularly known, was buried on September 6, 1997. Her grave is on an island in a lake in the grounds of her family home (Althorp House, [[Northamptonshire]]).
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