The relationship between Queen Victoria and her handsome, young Indian attendant Abdul Karim was deemed so controversial and scandalous by her family members that, upon the monarch’s death in 1901, they scrubbed his existence from royal history. According to The Telegraph, Victoria’s son Edward immediately demanded that any letters between the two found on the royal premises be burned. The family evicted Karim from the home the queen had given him, and deported him back to India. Victoria’s daughter Beatrice erased all reference to Karim in the Queen’s journals—a painstaking endeavor given Victoria’s decade-plus relationship with Karim, whom she considered her closest confidante. The royal family’s eradication of Karim was so thorough that a full 100 years would pass before an eagle-eyed journalist noticed a strange clue left in Victoria’s summer home—and her consequential investigation led to the discovery of Victoria’s relationship with Karim.
But why was the relationship so controversial—beyond the interclass curiosity of the Queen of England confiding in a servant—that it warranted full censure?
I really enjoyed this movie and recommend it.
it's one of the few movies i watched on the big screen when it came out! i love Judi Dench. and to know it was a true story.
ReplyDeleteit just made all of it even more interesting! i seldom go to the movies anymore. but that one i did. and like you ... i thought it was worth it! xo
I have to keep my eyes open for this movie on cable. I really like Judy Dench too. Thanks for reminding me of it.
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