![]() ![]() ![]() The news reached the royal family while they were away in Scotland at Balmoral Castle. The accident killed Diana, Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul. Just after midnight on August 31, a Mercedes carrying Diana and Fayed crashed in a tunnel not far from Paris’ Eiffel Tower. The Princess of Wales had finalized her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996, but intense media scrutiny still trailed her as she went on vacation the following summer with boyfriend Dodi Fayed. When Blair used that phrase in a speech following Diana’s death, he was searching for words to help a nation grieve a shockingly sudden loss. She was, in the words of former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, “the people’s princess.” And in the months before she died, she took her media spotlight and placed it squarely on the dangers of landmines in Angola. She made headlines in 1987 when she intentionally shook hands with an AIDS patient, working to dispel the myth that HIV/AIDS could be spread through touch. She used her celebrity to raise awareness for a number of causes, from leprosy to domestic violence to mental health. Every August, tributes pour in to celebrate her life and legacy – one that valued authenticity over protocol, and humanity over prestige. In the 24 years since her death on August 31, 1997, it’s become clear how well she fulfilled that hope. ![]()
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