King Charles highlights cost of living crisis in
first Christmas broadcast
Monarch pays tribute to the volunteers and charity
workers helping those in financial difficulty
Caroline
Davies
Sun 25 Dec
2022 15.10 GMT
King
Charles has highlighted the cost of living crisis and the “great anxiety and
hardship” of many struggling to “pay their bills and keep their families fed
and warm” in his first Christmas broadcast.
In the
message, with the nation in the grip of economic woes and against the backdrop
of the war in Ukraine, the king dedicated a major part of his broadcast to
those helping to ease the plight of others.
Footage of
food banks and meals being distributed to the needy featured prominently as he
praised “the wonderfully kind people” who had donated food or their time.
Delivered
from the quire of St George’s Chapel, Windsor, where the late Queen Elizabeth
II had also broadcast her Christmas message in 1999, the monarch paid tribute
to his mother, and recognised others who had lost loved ones.
Addressing
those of all faiths and none, he said religious communities were among those
helping others in financial difficulties. He also praised the volunteers,
charity workers, healthcare workers and others who had stepped up to help in
times of adversity.
On his
central theme of “selfless dedication” he said, it could be seen “in our armed
forces and emergency services who work tirelessly to keep us all safe.
“We see it
in our health and social care professionals, our teachers and indeed all those
working in public service, whose skill and commitment are at the heart of our
communities.
“And at
this time of great anxiety and hardship – be it for those around the world
facing conflict, famine or natural disaster, or for those at home finding ways
to pay their bills and keep their families fed and warm – we see it in the
humanity of people throughout our nations and the Commonwealth who so readily
respond to the plight of others.
“I
particularly want to pay tribute to all those wonderfully kind people who so
generously give food or donations, or that most precious commodity of all –
their time – to support those around them in greatest need, together with the
many charitable organisations which do such extraordinary work in the most
difficult circumstances.”
Of his own
Anglican faith, he shared the profound impact on him of visiting the Church of
Nativity in Bethlehem some years ago, the place Christians celebrate as the
birthplace of Jesus. “It meant more to me than I can possibly express to stand
on that spot where, as the Bible tells us, ‘The light that has come into the
world’ was born.”
The
pre-recorded message began with him reflecting on standing “so close to where
my beloved mother is laid to rest with my dear father” in the George VI
Memorial Chapel as he thanked the public for the “love and sympathy” expressed
in cards and messages of condolence.
Of his
personal loss, he said: “Christmas is a particularly poignant time for all of
us who have lost loved ones. We feel their absence at every familiar turn of
the season and remember them in each cherished tradition.” He shared the late
Queen’s “faith in people” , and the religious belief of the “power of light
overcoming darkness”, he said.
The
broadcast included footage of the armed forces and emergency services at work.
It also showed the core of the royal family as it now is. The Prince and
Princess of Wales were shown on a visit to Swansea. Other members of the royal
family were shown at various events, including the Earl and Countess of Wessex.
But there were no images or references to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
Charles
hosted Christmas Day at Sandringham with members of the royal family making
their traditional Christmas Day walk to St Mary Magdalene church on the Norfolk
estate.
The king
and the queen consort led members of the royal family as they walked to St Mary
Magdalene church, Sandringham, for a first Christmas Day service since the
death of Queen Elizabeth II. The Duke of York walked with them as a family
member, though he no longer has any public role and is no longer a working
royal.
For the
first time, the Prince and Princess of Wales brought their youngest son, Louis,
four, who joined his siblings George, nine, and Charlotte, seven. Other royals
who walked into the church past a small group of members of the public,
included Andrew’s daughters, Beatrice and Eugenie, and the Earl and Countess of
Wessex.
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