Hasnat
was Diana's real love, She Wanted to Become America's First Lady
SEP
13 - Lady Diana was not going to marry Dodi Al Fayed, because
there was someone else in her life. That person was a heart
surgeon in London named Hasnat Khan, a Pakistani-Briton.
"Neither Prince Charles or Dodi Al Fayed, was the love of
Princess Diana's life, Diana's butler and confidant Burrell said
to Good Morning America's Kate Snow in an exclusive interview.
It was love at first sight for the princess, he explained.
"They met by accident. The princess was visiting a friend at the
Royal Brompton Hospital in the UK. The elevator was about to close.
Someone put their foot in the door. The doors open, and the
princess saw a man in his scrubs."
"She looked at him and instantly knew that he was the one.
She said to me later, 'Paul, I just knew. He was drop-dead
gorgeous.'"
Burrell says the princess fell deeply in love with Khan, leaving
him messages at the hospital using a secret code name for
herself Dr. Allegra.
Their two-year relationship was rocky, according to Burrell.
One night Diana couldn't find Khan, so she sent her butler out
looking for him.
"I found him in the local pub, slumped in a corner, with a beer,
with a cigarette," Burrell said. "So I sat down with him and had
a heart to heart. Two men in a pub, with a pint."
The next morning, Burrell received a handwritten thank you
from the princess.
Burrell read from the letter on "Good Morning America":
"September the 16th, 1996. Dear Paul, Not many people
would venture out late at night to sort out a heart, basically
on a stranger's door. But then, not many people have the
kindness and qualities you possess."
Burrell
told Snow, "I did everything I could to make sure that she was
happy."
Also read earlier story on DesPardes.com:
Diana's secret love: Dr Hasnat Khan?
Diana's relationship with Khan ended, Burrell said, because the
doctor didn't want to go public.
"It's hard. Once the princess said to me, you know, 'Who's
going to marry me, Paul, with all my baggage?'"
When the princess died, Burrell said he had a secret
rendezvous with Khan.
Just before he left to meet the doctor, Burrell said he saw a
hair band that belonged to the princess sitting on a table.
"I picked it up, put it in my pocket, went down to the High
Street, and waited in the hotel car park and watched this old
car approach, and I knew it was him," Burrell said. "The two of
us didn't speak. And I pulled out this hair band from my pocket
and pushed it into his hand and and he put it to his nose
and smelled it. It's no words could explain the emotion of
that moment."
"It was a little piece of her. This the man that loved her
so much."
Trying to Make Khan Jealous
Burrell believes Princess Diana dated Dodi Al Fayed to make
Khan jealous.
The ill-fated pair had been together for less than 30 days
before the accident in Paris.
Fayed spent all of 10 minutes inside Kensington Palace,
Burrell said.
He dismissed claims that Diana was engaged to Fayed when they
died in a Paris car crash.
New photos in his blockbuster book, "The Way We Were,"
show the palace just as it was when Diana died, including the
dressing room where she sat every morning.
"I can see her [sit] there now," Burrell said. "Her glass-top
dressing table with pictures of her boys pushed underneath, so
that she could see them every morning."
When Diana was buried, Burrell took those pictures of Prince
Harry and Prince William from under her glass dressing table and
put them in her coffin.
"It's no surprise that the boys were really the most
important things in her life," he said. "She adored her boys.
And those pictures, which she looked at every morning, I
thought, should travel with her to another place."
Burrell
knows he's being accused of revealing too much telling secrets
to make a buck.
"That'll always be thrown my way," he said. "I am caught
between the devil and the deep blue sea, because I'm damned if I
do and damned if I don't."
But Burrell says he has many secrets about Princess Diana he
will never share publicly.
"There are secrets that will go with me to the grave," he
said.
Ambitions
Burrell also says that Princess Diana had ambitions to become
the first lady of the United States.
"She knew a billionaire in America, and she suggested to him
that if they were together.
His yearning to run in politics
could lead to the White House, that one day she could be the
first lady and she'd visit Britain on a state visit,"
Burrell said that in the mid-1990s Diana had dreamed of
following in the footsteps of stylish first ladies.
"She's been a huge fan of Jackie Onassis for years, and a
huge admirer, too, of Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton. But
Jackie Onassis had the edge. And she fantasized about
redecorating the White House," Burrell said.
"It wasn't a fantasy. It could have been a reality. It really
could. They would have been a golden couple."
While the mystery man in New York had political connections,
he was not the love of Princess Diana's life. It was Hasnat, a
Pakistani-Briton heart surgeon!
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From Wikipedia:
Diana, Princess of Wales (Diana Frances
Mountbatten-Windsor, nιe Spencer) (July 1, 1961August 31, 1997)
was the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales. Her two sons,
Prince William of Wales and Prince Henry of Wales (called Prince
Harry), are, respectively, second and third in line to the
British throne.
From her marriage in 1981 to her divorce in 1996, she was styled
Her Royal Highness The Princess of Wales. After her divorce from
the Prince of Wales in 1996, Diana ceased to be The Princess of
Wales and lost the resulting Royal Highness style.[1] As the
former wife of the heir to the throne she received a title based
on the format used for the ex-wives of peers, namely her
personal name, followed by her title. Under Letters Patent
issued by Elizabeth II she was known after her divorce as Diana,
Princess of Wales. Posthumously she is most popularly referred
to as Princess Diana, a title she never held. She is also
sometimes known by her former titles above.[2]
An iconic presence on the world stage, Diana was noted for her
high-profile charity work. Yet her philanthropic endeavours were
overshadowed by her scandal-plagued marriage to Prince Charles.
Her bitter claims, via friends and biographers, of adultery,
mental cruelty, and emotional distress visited upon her by her
husband and the royal family in general, and her own admissions
of adultery and numerous love affairs riveted the world for much
of the 1990s, spawning books, tabloid newspaper and magazine
articles, and television movies. During her lifetime, Diana
appeared on the cover of People more times than any other
individual.
From the time of her engagement to the Prince of Wales in 1981
until her death in a car accident in 1997, the Princess was
arguably the most famous woman in the world: the pre-eminent
female celebrity of her generation: a fashion icon, an image of
feminine beauty, admired and emulated for her involvement in
AIDS issues, and the international campaign against landmines.
During her lifetime, she was often described as the world's most
photographed person. To her admirers, the Princess of Wales was
a role model after her death, there were even calls for her to
be nominated for sainthood while her detractors consider her
to have been mentally ill (possibly with Borderline Personality
Disorder[3]).
As of 2006, the inquiry into her death by British police
continues. A report is expected to be issued in 2007.