This Article is From Aug 19, 2019

Princess Diana Wanted To Help AIDS Patients In Kolkata, Reveals New Book

In a letter from Kensington Palace, dated February 10, 1997, to LM Singhvi, India's longest-serving high commissioner to the UK in the early nineties, Princess Diana expressed her keenness to work for India.

Princess Diana Wanted To Help AIDS Patients In Kolkata, Reveals New Book

Princess Diana and her husband Prince Charles wrote letters to LM Singhvi. (File)

New Delhi:

Princess Diana in 1997 had expressed her desire to accommodate a small number of AIDS patients in Kolkata after Mother Teresa talked about it, reveals a new book on LM Singhvi, India's longest-serving high commissioner to the UK in the early nineties.

Titled "The Journey of a Wise Man: LM Singhvi", a pictorial biography of the statesman by his son, Abhishek Singhvi, the book brings to light many interesting nuggets.

Princess Diana and her husband Prince Charles had an abiding friendship with LM Singhvi.

Published by Palimpsest, the book has rare photographs and documents of historical importance. One such picture shows the first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru at a spiritual session with a Jain Muni in 1962, offering a valuable insight into his persona given his scientific temperament.

"I read with great interest of your visit to Mother Teresa. I have the fondest memories of my meeting with her and she is constantly in my thoughts," Princess Diana wrote to Mr Singhvi in a letter dated May 1, 1997.

"I would love to be involved with the house to accommodate a small number of AIDS patients in Calcutta and am deeply touched that Mother Teresa thought of asking me," she continued.

In another letter from Kensington Palace, dated February 10, 1997, the Princess expressed her keenness to work for India. "If you, High Commissioner, felt that I could help in your country in any way, please do not hesitate to contact me."

Prince Charles, on the other hand, in his letter of August 16, 1996, wrote, "Having been conceived a few months after the transfer of power, I feel a particular affinity in age with the Republic of India."

The author of the book, a Rajya Sabha member and a legal expert, throws light on the circumstances leading to his father's pioneering initiatives on the Indian Diaspora project, institution of the Lokpal and panchayati raj heading two high-power committees.

The book also has essays by former diplomats Lalit Mansingh and Gopalkrishna Gandhi, former CJI RC Lahoti and veteran BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi on different aspects of LM Singhvi's contribution to diplomacy, politics, culture and jurisprudence.

Abhishek Singhvi describes his father as a remarkable man who was a polyglot, knowledgeable about Sanskrit, Hindi and English literature.

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