Latest news with #HolocaustMemorialDay


Newsweek
21-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Newsweek
All Princess Kate's 2025 Outfits, So Far
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Princess Kate's increased visibility in 2025 has given fans greater opportunity to see her extensive royal wardrobe, from V-E Day to royal pageantry. The Princess of Wales spent much of 2024 out of the limelight as she underwent chemotherapy for cancer. But in January, she announced she is officially in remission after the first in a succession of royal visits this year. Princess Kate's Visit to the Royal Marsden Kate announced her remission on the same day she visited staff at the Royal Marsden Hospital to thank them for her care. She wore a burgundy Gabriela Hearst turtleneck sweater, which she paired with an Edeline Lee skirt. L: Princess Kate wears red to the Commonwealth Day Service at Westminster Abbey, on March 10, 2025. R: Kate wears a white polka dot dress to a Service of Thanksgiving on V-E Day, May 8,... L: Princess Kate wears red to the Commonwealth Day Service at Westminster Abbey, on March 10, 2025. R: Kate wears a white polka dot dress to a Service of Thanksgiving on V-E Day, May 8, 2025. More Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images Princess Kate Commemorates Holocaust Memorial Day Kate marked the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau and Holocaust Memorial Day at the Guildhall on January 27. She wore a dark navy suit with a layered pearl necklace and Bahrain Pearl Drop earrings. Pearls are often worn at times of mourning as they resemble tears. L: Princess Kate and Prince William on Holocaust Memorial Day, January 27, 2025. R: Kate during a visit to The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on January 14, 2025 L: Princess Kate and Prince William on Holocaust Memorial Day, January 27, 2025. R: Kate during a visit to The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on January 14, 2025and Arthur Edwards -Kate's Children's Hospice Visit Kate wore a monochrome houndstooth dress with a pussy-bow neckline from Zara to Tŷ Hafan, a children's hospice based in Sully, a Welsh village near Cardiff, on January 30. The hospice was the first in Wales when it opened in 1999. Kate at the National Portrait Gallery For her visit to the National Portrait Gallery on February 4, the princess opted for a brown wool jacket by designer Petar Petrov, who was born in Ukraine, over a dark turtle-neck sweater and pinstripe Max Mara trousers. The engagement was part of the launch of her Shaping Us Framework, which aims to promote social and emotional well-being, and is part of her campaign to focus on the early years of a child's life. L: Princess Kate visits The National Portrait Gallery in London on February 4, 2025. R: Kate visits the Ty Hafan children's hospice in Wales on January 30, 2025. L: Princess Kate visits The National Portrait Gallery in London on February 4, 2025. R: Kate visits the Ty Hafan children's hospice in Wales on January 30, 2025. Arthur Edwards -and Richard Pohle -"To create a physically and mentally healthier society, we must reset, restore, and rebalance," Kate said in a foreword to a report accompanying the launch. "That means taking a profound look at ourselves and our own behaviours, emotions, and feelings. "It means getting much better at acting with compassion and empathy towards one another... better understanding how we can protect and build upon what connects and unites acknowledging that society is something we build together, through the actions we take every day." Kate Supports Flood-Hit Towns The Princess of Wales chose bright colors for a visit to Pontypridd Market in Wales on February 26, where she heard about the impact of Storm Bert and Storm Darragh, which had caused flooding in the area. She wore a bright red Alexander McQueen coat over a Gucci skirt and black boots. Red is one of the national colors of Wales, represented on its flag by a dragon. L: Princess Kate wears red for a visit to Pontypridd Market, in Wales, on February 26, 2025. R: Kate wears red again to the Commonwealth Day Service at Westminster Abbey on March 10, 2025. L: Princess Kate wears red for a visit to Pontypridd Market, in Wales, on February 26, 2025. R: Kate wears red again to the Commonwealth Day Service at Westminster Abbey on March 10, 2025. Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images Kate at the Commonwealth Day Service In March, Kate again opted for bright red, pairing it with a Catherine Walker coat dress, and complemented it with meaningful jewelry choices for Commonwealth Day. She opted for Princess Diana's Collingwood pearl and diamond earrings, paired with a four-strand Japanese pearl necklace that belonged to Queen Elizabeth II, at Westminster Abbey on March 10. Kate's Trip to the Rugby Princess Kate opted for a sleek black double-breasted, military-style coat with a black turtle neck on a visit to Cardiff to watch England beat Wales at the Principality Stadium on March 15. As patron of England's Rugby Football Union, she was the one celebrating a 68-14 victory while Prince William, as patron of the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU), was left licking his wounds. L: Princess Kate wears green for the St. Patrick's Day Parade in London on March 17, 2025. R: Kate at Principality Stadium in Wales on March 15, 2025. L: Princess Kate wears green for the St. Patrick's Day Parade in London on March 17, 2025. R: Kate at Principality Stadium in Wales on March 15, 2025. Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images St Patrick's Day Kate wore the color of Ireland for the St Patrick's Parade at Wellington Barracks on March 17. A dark green Alexander McQueen coat dress helped her show support as Colonel-in-Chief of the Irish Guards. Kate Wears Tweed in Scotland The princess wore a Ralph Lauren Tweed jacket and a blue Boden shirt during a visit to Aros Hall, on the Isle of Mull, on April 29. The following day, she was back in Scotland, wearing a brown jacket with a green sweater and a blouse with a pie-crust collar on the Isle of Iona. L: Princess Kate visited Aros Hall on the Isle of Mull on April 29, 2025. R: Kate visits the Isles of Iona on April 30, 2025. L: Princess Kate visited Aros Hall on the Isle of Mull on April 29, 2025. R: Kate visits the Isles of Iona on April 30, 2025. Karwai Tang/WireImage V-E Day Kate marked the 80th anniversary of the Allied Victory in Europe on May 5 in a burgundy Emilia Wickstead coat dress and a Jane Taylor hat. She joined Prince William and their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, to watch a flypast from the Buckingham Palace balcony. The commemorations continued on May 8 with a Service of Thanksgiving at Westminster Abbey, when Kate wore a white and black polka dot dress by Alessandra Rich. L: Princess Kate stands with her children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on May 5, 2025. R: Kate attends a concert to mark the 80th Anniversary of... L: Princess Kate stands with her children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on May 5, 2025. R: Kate attends a concert to mark the 80th Anniversary of V-E Day at Horse Guards Parade on May 8, 2025. More Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images andAnd the same day, she wore a white Self Portrait blazer dress with pearl earrings and a Susan Caplan necklace to a V-E Day concert. Kate Visits the British Fashion Council Princess Kate wore an olive green suit by Victoria Beckham during a visit to the British Fashion Council at 180 Studios in London, where she presented the Queen Elizabeth II Award for British Design on May 13. L: Princess Kate at the British Fashion Council in London on May 13, 2025. R: Kate at a Buckingham Palace garden party on May 20, 2025. L: Princess Kate at the British Fashion Council in London on May 13, 2025. R: Kate at a Buckingham Palace garden party on May 20, 2025. Aaron Chown -A Buckingham Palace Garden Party Kate wore a yellow Emilia Wickstead dress with a matching hat by Philip Treacy as she attended her first Buckingham Palace garden party in two years on May 20. The Naming of HMS Glasgow Kate wore a nautical-themed navy blue and white Suzannah London coat dress and a Philip Treacy hat for the naming ceremony for HMS Glasgow, at the BAE Systems shipyard in Scotstoun, on May 22, L: Princess Kate wears nautical blue to the naming ceremony for HMS Glasgow on May 22, 2025. R: Kate visits the V&A East Storehouse on June 10, 2025. L: Princess Kate wears nautical blue to the naming ceremony for HMS Glasgow on May 22, 2025. R: Kate visits the V&A East Storehouse on June 10, 2025. Andy Barr -and Eddie Mulholland -Kate Visits V&A East Storehouse Kate wore an Alexander McQueen trouser suit paired with a white scoop-neck top as she visited the V&A East Storehouse on June 10. London's Victoria & Albert Museum gave unprecedented access to its collection of 600,000 artifacts from the creative arts when it opened up its storehouse to the public on May 31. Trooping the Colour Kate wore an aquamarine Catherine Walker dress coat and a matching hat by Juliette Botterill to Trooping the Colour on June 14. She took part in the royal carriage procession, took her place on the dais alongside King Charles and Queen Camilla and watched the R.A.F. flypast from the Buckingham Palace balcony. Princess Kate wears an aquamarine coat dress alongside Prince William and their children on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on June 14, 2025. Princess Kate wears an aquamarine coat dress alongside Prince William and their children on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on June 14, Day On Monday, Kate attended the Order of the Garter service at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, wearing the same dress she had chosen for the V-E Day concert. The white Self Portrait outfit consists of a belted blazer and a pleated midi skirt that appear to be separate but are, in fact, one piece. Kate Middleton attends the Order of the Garter service at St. George's Chapel on June 16, 2025. Kate Middleton attends the Order of the Garter service at St. George's Chapel on June 16, 2025. Max Mumby - Pool via Samir Hussein/WireImage Jack Royston is chief royal correspondent for Newsweek, based in London. You can find him on X, formerly Twitter, at @jack_royston and read his stories on Newsweek's The Royals Facebook page. Do you have a question about King Charles III and Queen Camilla, Prince William and Princess Kate, Meghan and Harry, or their family that you would like our experienced royal correspondents to answer? Email royals@ We'd love to hear from you.
Yahoo
09-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Why the wrong memorial will water down the Holocaust
On Wednesday, the Holocaust Memorial Bill returns to the House of Lords. What a waste of energy over seven and more years this project has been. The motives are good. Unfortunately, the idea is not. In the great battle against growing anti-Semitism in our society, precious weapons are being mistargeted. There are strong second-order objections to the memorial and its accompanying 'learning centre'. They include the vast cost, over £200 million; the lack of room in Victoria Tower Gardens and the loss of green space; the security risk at the heart of government and Parliament which the police and parliamentary authorities increasingly fail to control; and the fact that the gardens will soon be overcrowded by the overspill for the coming 30-year project to restore the fabric of the Houses of Parliament next door. There will be parliamentary amendments tomorrow to address these last two points. Most of the Bill's opponents, many of whom are Jewish, do want a memorial, but a much smaller and more beautiful one. The present design is a grandiose hand-me-down, by the somewhat discredited architect David Adjaye, already used elsewhere. Opponents also do not want the learning centre. Tristram Hunt, the distinguished director of the V&A, thinks it could be much better managed at the Imperial War Museum. The key objection relates to what is really being commemorated. If you track the history of Holocaust Memorial Day since it was instituted a quarter of a century ago, you will find increasing pressure to water down the concept. There have been several occasions – ITV's Good Morning Britain this year, for example – in which coverage has entirely failed to mention the Jews at all, let alone the fact that the Holocaust killed six million of them. People such as the former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, unfailingly hostile to Israel and previously friendly to murderous Hamas, have thus found it possible to take part in Holocaust Memorial Day without having to confront the grim truth of history. Over time, the uniqueness of the Jewish experience thus slips away. A process begins in which the word 'Holocaust' is taken to stand for any persecution of any group by any other group. From there, it is a short step to suggesting, as pro-Gaza mobs always do, that Israel itself is committing genocide against Palestinians. This is not an isolated outbreak of a few fanatics, but a deliberate plan to strip the Jewish state – and all Jews – of their moral authority. The ultimate aim is to preach the equation 'Jews = Israel = Nazis'. This libel is so widespread as to have become one of the main tropes of anti-Semitism. The danger is that the wrong sort of commemoration will facilitate this. Delegations from anti-Israel countries and 'humanitarian' organisations emerging from Parliament will stroll into Victoria Tower Gardens, pose outside the Holocaust Memorial and deliver their piece to camera about alleged war crimes, starvation of children etc. You can just imagine the ineffable Greta Thunberg doing exactly that. Sad to say, both main political parties are putting on whips to get the memorial Bill through Parliament. This suggests an underlying uncertainty about the rightness of their cause. Traditionally, votes on matters of conscience are not whipped. Surely Holocaust commemoration is a classic conscience issue in which party considerations have no place. I fear that establishment politicians, frightened of being labelled anti-Semitic, have supported this great big project without thinking about it. Yet thought is exactly what is needed to correct the errors of Holocaust education today. By the way, there exists a splendid role model for commemoration in, of all places, Poland. The POLIN museum in Warsaw movingly and expertly relates its country's part of the full story we all need to know – how Jews lived there for a thousand years and how, in the end, and most horribly, they died. Like many parishes, our village held its annual fete last Saturday. The problem, in advance, was the weather. Nowadays, weather forecasting is so much more accurate that if it says, two or three days before, that it will rain, it probably will. So event-planners must take it seriously. This avoids the occasional spectacular washouts of the past, after which everyone used to say, through gritted teeth, 'Rain failed to dampen the spirits'. Our organisers therefore did the prudent thing and announced that the fete would not be held in the public garden by the church but in the village's two interconnected halls. The trouble was that, on the day, there was virtually no rain during the fete's opening hours. We all felt slightly silly because we could have stuck with the original plan and saved ourselves a lot of trouble. Should we have followed the old way and just held the thing outdoors, rain or shine? I am not sure of the answer. But I do know that everyone enjoyed the make-do atmosphere among the crowded stalls and the noisy Punch-and-Judy show inside, finding community in adversity. Business was brisk. The splash headline in our local paper says, 'Post office to remain open'. My first reaction was to laugh at this non-news. After all, it is in the nature of shops to open. But I quickly realised I was wrong. It was indeed news. The unspoken policy of the modern Post Office is to close itself down. A decision in the opposite direction certainly deserves the front page. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Yahoo
26-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Kate Middleton Subtly Honors Holocaust Victims with Her Jewelry at VE Day Concert
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Prince William and Princess Kate made a surprise appearance with King Charles and Queen Camilla on Thursday, May 8, attending a concert to commemorate the 80th anniversary of VE Day, which marks the end of World War II in Europe. The event, which included music from the WWII era and stories from veterans, was a last-minute addition to the couple's calendar after they joined the Royal Family for a service of thanksgiving at Westminster Abbey earlier in the day. The Princess of Wales has long been a master at sending messages with her wardrobe, and once again, she wore a symbolic piece as she honored the wartime generation. Princess Kate—dressed in a white Self-Portrait blazer dress—wore the same five-strand pearl necklace that she debuted at a Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony in January to the concert. The £275 piece was created by Jewish designer Susan Caplan and was crafted from vintage faux pearls. At the time, Caplan posted on Instagram, writing, "Today marks 80 years since the Holocaust, and as a Jewish owned brand we are honoured that the Princess of Wales chose to wear our necklace for today's memorial to commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day." Pearls are a traditional symbol of mourning and remembrance, making the necklace all the more appropriate for the event. Members of the Royal Family have worn pearl necklaces and earrings to memorials and family funerals over the years, such as when the Princess of Wales wore Queen Elizabeth's Japanese Pearl Choker and Bahrain Pearl Drop Earrings to the late monarch's 2022 funeral. As for the rest of her outfit, the Princess of Wales wore a vintage pair of Susan Caplan pearl cluster earrings with her Self-Portrait dress, a piece she wore for a 2021 reception at Buckingham Palace and the Platinum Party at the Palace concert in 2022. The future queen topped her look off with a black velvet bow, wearing her hair pulled half back in soft curls. Earlier Thursday, Princess Kate repeated the white polka dot Alessandra Rich dress she first wore to Garter Day in 2023, pairing the style with a black veiled hat and tan Demellier London handbag. And on Monday, the Princess of Wales wore a vintage-style berry coat dress to attend a military parade and VE Day flypast with Prince William and their three children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.


Los Angeles Times
22-05-2025
- General
- Los Angeles Times
Holocaust Survivor Hannah Holsten Shares Her Story on the Harvey School Campus
As one of the last living survivors of the Holocaust, Hannah Holsten carries a story that demands to be heard — not simply to inform, but to serve as a warning. Her visit to the Harvey School on Jan. 15 proves the value of these testimonies and the lasting impact they have on those who listen. While survivors are still with us, every student should take the opportunity to hear voices like Holsten's so they are prepared to recognize injustice and stand up against it. Recognizing this importance, the Harvey School made a dedicated effort to bring a first-hand account to its students. In collaboration with the school's Jewish Culture Club, the Harvey English and History departments organized the event to commemorate Holocaust Memorial Day. English and History Department Heads Virginia Holmes and Jessica Falcon partnered with the Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center to select a speaker. From the Center, Executive Director Millie Jasper and Speakers Bureau Liaison Bette Sparago connected them to Holsten, who lived a normal life in Nuremberg, Germany until 1938—when the night of Kristallnacht shattered it all. On the night of Kristallnacht, Holsten shared that the Nazis destroyed all of her family's personal belongings and jewelry store. This was the beginning of the world's descent into unspeakable horror—one that millions would not survive. According to Holsten, what followed was a period of displacement and almost impossible choices that defined her years in the shadows. At the Harvey School, Holsten gave her testimony, stating that she felt an obligation to speak. 'I'm here,' her voice quivered. 'Six million of my brethren are not.' Teacher Nate Alexander and student Benji Cutler recorded her testimony, preserving it as a record presented to the entire Upper School Community on Feb. 11. Observing nearly every student in the room captivated by the gravity of Holsten's words, Department Head Ms. Holmes explained: 'Not only is the content in her story so powerful, but she herself was such a dynamic speaker that the Harvey community was listening to every word she had to say.' Among many of Holsten's reminders was that while it is easy to reimagine history's greatest atrocity as the work of a single individual, it is crucial to remember that Adolf Hitler was legally elected. In other words, he didn't seize power by surprise—he was chosen. Holsten detailed the systemic laws that slowly eroded the rights of the Jewish people until they were no longer humans but problems to be solved. Yet what allowed Hitler to finally claim absolute power, in Holsten's words, was silence. 'Whatever he did, it was in silence,' she reminded the audience. 'No one at all spoke up.' As Holsten shared her story with the Harvey School, she recounted the moments when fate blurred the line between her family's tactics and sheer luck on their route toward survival. After Kristallnacht, Holsten recounts her mother putting her and her brother on a train to Amsterdam. Though they were not allowed to disembark there—this attempt to escape having failed—Holsten's Dutch aunt joined the train and convinced the children to exchange their toys for new ones. Holsten revealed that her mother had hidden jewels inside the toys, hoping that the family could use the jewels to potentially bargain for their survival. The toys fulfilled this wish, and Holsten's father eventually used the jewels to hire new smugglers to begin their escape. Holsten said that the terror of being nearly caught haunted her and her family at every step. Survival during the Holocaust meant being subject to forces beyond one's control, Holsten explained. Transported by new smugglers to escape, her family was hidden in the disguised bottom of a hay wagon. 'We rolled along the countryside—and of course, we were stopped,' Holsten said. What followed was a life-saving twist of fate. According to Holsten, 'The Nazi officers took their pitchforks and put them in the hay. Who was looking after us? Maybe it was God. Maybe it was destiny. Maybe it was luck. They did not penetrate us. They were so high that what they hit was really hay—and not us.' When the smuggler transporting them could go no further, Holsten remembers him directing the family toward a bridge—their only path into Belgium and safety. But when they arrived, a troop of German soldiers with bayonets lined the bridge. According to Holsten, another miracle of chance saved her and her family. By sheer luck, the soldiers turned around and allowed them to cross the bridge. 'Was it empathy? Was it [that] they saw a young woman with three children, and they [decided not to] kill them?' Holsten asked the students at the Harvey School—chills permeating the room. Once in Belgium, Holsten recalls her father using their family's remaining money to reach Britain. After a year enduring blitzkriegs there, Holsten's family left for the United States. But Holsten makes clear that they were among the fortunate. Millions—including many of Holsten's relatives—never made it out. Holsten shares that at an age when most children learned nursery rhymes and games, she had endured the art of survival. Eventually, her family was granted entry into the United Kingdom—where she lived in Cardiff before making her way by boat to the United States. Holsten described her current life, explaining that she now lives in Hartsdale as the bearer of her family's legacy— a legacy that defied Hitler's attempts to erase the Jewish people. She has three children, ten grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren, and enjoyed a long career in Jewish education, retiring a decade ago. At the end of her story, Holsten recounted a final memory that left students shocked. Her aunt, who had hid in Holland, was betrayed and deported to Auschwitz. Her aunt had a son— a 4-year-old of whom she made the difficult choice to give away to strangers to give her son a chance of survival. These acts of sacrifice defined the Holocaust. Holsten's aunt knew she would not survive— but her son had a chance. Later, Holsten revealed that her aunt endured Auschwitz until liberation. Her husband was not as fortunate and died on a death march shortly before being freed. Incredibly, Holsten shared that her aunt's son survived and lives today in Israel. Yet, the story of his mother and millions of victims reflects the unspeakable cruelty of the Holocaust. The Harvey School administration now intends on sharing Holsten's story every four years, ensuring that every graduating class hears Holsten's story. As the last living survivors of the Holocaust slowly leave us, the responsibility of remembrance falls on the generations who live long after. Holsten's story reveals that history is never far in the distance— and that unspeakable cruelty and violence may resurrect itself if we dare not confront our silence and complacency. Looking ahead, they remain committed to never letting Holsten's words fade. The act of listening to Holsten's recorded testimony will forever be a part of the Harvey School's graduation tradition, inspiring students to preserve an unspeakable history in the name of shared responsibility— and ensuring that the terrors of the Holocaust never happen again. As we navigate an era marked by rising disinformation, extremism, and social tension, Holsten's story is not just relevant — it's essential. Her testimony serves not just as a remembrance of the past, but as a warning to the present. To ensure that such atrocities are never repeated, we need to continue listening to the stories of survivors while they are still with us and commit to carrying their voices forward once they are gone. Related
Yahoo
20-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Kate Middleton Shares Emotional Hug with Holocaust Survivor During Their Royal Garden Party Reunion
At a Buckingham Palace garden party, Kate Middleton reunited with a Holocaust survivor who she photographed about five years ago She first met Steven Frank about five years ago, when they participated in a project marking the 75th anniversary of the end of the tragedy The pair also connected at a memorial event in late JanuaryKate Middleton had a special reunion at the latest Buckingham Palace garden party. At the royal event on Tuesday, May 20, the Princess of Wales shared a warm embrace with Steven Frank, a man originally from Amsterdam who lived through multiple concentration camps as a child. Kate, 43, photographed Frank with his then-teenaged granddaughters, Maggie and Trixie Fleet, five years ago for a project marking the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II. The royal said at the time, 'The harrowing atrocities of the Holocaust, which were caused by the most unthinkable evil, will forever lay heavy in our hearts. Yet it is so often through the most unimaginable adversity that the most remarkable people flourish.' 'They look back on their experiences with sadness but also with gratitude that they were some of the lucky few to make it through. Their stories will stay with me forever,' she said of the experience. 'Whilst I have been lucky enough to meet two of the now very few survivors, I recognize not everyone in the future will be able to hear these stories firsthand. It is vital that their memories are preserved and passed on to future generations, so that what they went through will never be forgotten.' Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage? to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more! Princess Kate also reunited with Frank and another survivor, Yvonne Bernstein, on Jan. 27 when she and Prince William attended an event in London honoring Holocaust Memorial Day and the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. During their reunion earlier this year, Princess Kate told Frank, 'I want to give you a big cuddle,' before the two embraced, according to the Daily Mail. Princess Kate and Prince William helped host the garden party at Buckingham Palace in London on Tuesday, marking their first appearance of the year at the seasonal events. For Kate, it was her first time attending one of the numerous garden parties each year since 2023, as she didn't attend any last year amid her cancer treatment. Read the original article on People