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There was hope for change among the monarchy, and the UK, when Meghan Markle joined the royal family. Any remaining shred of that notion has disapperaed.
At the May 2018 wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex the British royal family welcomed its first black member with what looked like earnest, open-armed enthusiasm. A Black preacher from Chicago gave a sermon on the uniting power of love over division; a gospel choir sang a stirring rendition of Ben E King s
Stand by Me. Kali Nicole Gross, a professor of African American studies at Emory University, remembers just how hopeful it felt for a family and a country with a history of racism to accept Meghan, who has a black mother and a white father.
That Meghan, an actress-turned-princess whose nuptials were a national celebration, wasn’t immune to racism raises questions about how pervasive those sentiments still are within the royal family.
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