King
Edward VIII: Uncle who encouraged young Queen's Nazi salute 'plotted
with Adolf Hitler to regain throne'
18
July, 2015
Four
years after being filmed performing the Nazi
salute with
a young Queen Elizabeth, Prince Edward repeated the gesture to Adolf
Hitler himself during a visit to Germany.
The
Third Reich later plotted to install him as a puppet monarch in the
event of a British invasion, with his wife Wallis Simpson allegedly
wanting to join him on the throne “at any price”.
The
emergence of footage showing a young Queen, her mother and uncle has
refocused attention on the abdicated king’s alleged Nazi links.
Princess
Elizabeth, aged six or seven, is seen raising her arm in the salute
alongside the Queen Mother, her uncle the Prince of Wales and younger
sister Princess Margaret.
Buckingham
Palace defended the footage by saying it shows the royal family
“playing” and that “no one at that time had any sense how (the
salute) would evolve”.
The
infamous gesture was used widely in Britain to mock Hitler at the
time and its performance was not automatically considered an approval
of his regime.
The
grainy film obtained by The
Sun dates
from 1933, when Adolf Hitler was gathering power as Chancellor of
Germany.
The
footage appears to show Princess Elizabeth, her mother and uncle
performing the salute
The
Nazi Party had gained popular support and would soon hold complete
power with its 25-point programme declaring that Jews could not be
citizens as they were not members of the “Germanic race”.
By
the end of the year, crackdowns had been launched on homosexual
rights groups, socialists, trade unions and all opposition political
parties were banned.
“Un-German”
books were burned, newspapers shut down, the Gestapo established and
forced sterilisation began.
Although
the Holocaust is widely considered to have started several years
later, 1933 saw attacks on Jewish businesses, Jews and “non-Germans”
being banned from public service and Himmler announced the
establishment of the first concentration camp at Dachau.
Prince
Edward, who later became King Edward VIII and controversially
abdicated to marry American divorcee Mrs Simpson, faced persistent
accusations of being a Nazi sympathiser during his lifetime and since
his death in 1972.
Books
being burned in Nazi Germany in 1933, the year the footage was
filmed
As
the young Prince of Wales, he had close ties to Germany through his
mother, a German princess, and the childhood holidays he spent there.
He
reportedly admired Hitler's economic and social reforms said
suggested Britain should offer the Nazis friendship, upsetting the
opposed royal household and British government.
On
becoming king in 1936, Edward was said to have wanted to speak
privately with Hitler without his government's knowledge, and claimed
he would abandon the throne if the then Prime Minister declared war.
After
his abdication and marriage, he visited Germany with his wife –
then styled the Duke and Duchess of Windsor – in 1937, less than
two years before the Second World War broke out.
Edward
reportedly wanted to discuss becoming a figurehead for an
international movement for peace on Hitler's terms, meeting the
Fuhrer at his mountain retreat of Obersalzberg.
Wallis
Simpson and Edward VIII were married in June 1937
He
is also said to have met Hitler's deputy Rudolf Hess twice as part of
the scheme, which would have seen him re-installed
as monarch if the Nazis invaded Britain.
A
memo from a Foreign Office informant in 1940 suggested his wife
wanted to join him on the throne, “desiring at any price to become
Queen”.
“The
Germans propose to form an opposition government with the Duke of
Windsor, having first changed public opinion by propaganda,” the
memo said.
“The
Germans think King George will abdicate during the attack on London.”
Evidence
also emerged that Edward visited the early stages of concentration
camps, although it is not thought evidence of mass murder was made
clear to him.
It
is evident that the Queen and other members of the royal family did
not share her uncle’s views.
A
spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said it was “disappointing”
that the salute footage, believed to be from Her Majesty's personal
family archive, had been obtained and “exploited”.
"Most
people will see these pictures in their proper context and time,” a
source said.
"This
is a family playing and momentarily referencing a gesture many would
have seen from contemporary news reels.
"No
one at that time had any sense how it would evolve. To imply anything
else is misleading and dishonest.
"The
Queen is around six years of age at the time and entirely innocent of
attaching any meaning to these gestures.
"The
Queen and her family's service and dedication to the welfare of this
nation during the war, and the 63 years The Queen has spent building
relations between nations and peoples speaks for itself.”
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