The Royal Family: 1)Prince Harry says visiting Canadian veterans is the highlight of his Toronto trip; 2)Prince Harry in Toronto this week for several events tied to Remembrance Day; 3)Andrew’s royal exit is the latest crisis for Britain’s monarchy
1) Prince Harry says visiting Canadian veterans is the highlight of his Toronto trip
Courtesy Barrie360.com and Canadian Press
By Rianna Lim, November 7, 2025
Veterans at a care centre in Toronto gathered Thursday to present their art therapy work to Prince Harry and share their stories ahead of Remembrance Day, as they reflected on the lasting impact of their sacrifices in service.
The Duke of Sussex called it a highlight of his two-day visit to Toronto, which included several events in support of Canadian veterans and military members.
Sitting in a woodworking studio at Sunnybrook Hospital’s veterans centre, a group of residents painted red poppies onto wood carvings. Among them was Ozzie Reece, 75, who served in the Canadian military for more than three decades.
Remembrance Day is important to him and it’s something he looks forward to, he said, because it’s a reminder of his family’s ties to service.
“It means a lot to me because my grandfather fought in both world wars, so it always brings back memories of what he did,” said Reece. “I had a chance to be part of it, too. So it’s very exciting for me.”
Now his own daughter is serving in the military, he said. That legacy is part of why the community at the care centre is so special to him, he added, because his fellow residents also understand what it’s like to serve and they often discuss their stories while creating art together.
“It’s beautiful because for us, we share our feelings and it’s nice to see one another and remember the things we do in the past,” he said with a smile. “We like each other, we look out for each other.”
Moments later, Reece and other residents shared their work with Prince Harry.
The Duke of Sussex, who served in Afghanistan as a member of the British military, was visiting Sunnybrook at the invitation of the True Patriot Love Foundation, which supports Canadian military members, veterans and their families.
The veterans centre is the largest of its kind in Canada, and it supports more than 300 veterans from the Second World War and the Korean War through specialized care, including art therapy.
At the centre’s art studio, the duke met with more veterans including 97-year-old Richard Ratcliff, who has tufted more than 50 custom rugs during his time at Sunnybrook, and 101-year-old former pilot Jim LaForce, whom the duke helped paint red poppies onto an army helmet. Several helmets painted by veterans were to be auctioned off that night to support the foundation.
But one was saved as a gift for Prince Harry and painted with a Canadian landscape, explained 101-year-old veteran Brenda Reid.
“We have a helmet, especially for you, and it represents the Invictus Games in Vancouver,” she told the duke, noting that she’d painted mountains and trees onto the helmet with the help of fellow residents.
Prince Harry thanked the residents for their service before giving them each a medallion keepsake.
“Thank you for your stories, for your sense of humour, for your skilled artwork in every form,” he told the group.
Prince Harry added that he hoped the residents have the opportunity to reflect on their service ahead of Remembrance Day, and Canadians at large do, too.
“I hope collectively, as a society, we can prevent ourselves from repeating some of the mistakes of the past,” he said. “There’s a lot to learn here around this table and in this building, so I hope that people can listen.”
2)Prince Harry in Toronto this week for several events tied to Remembrance Day
Courtesy Barrie360.com and Canadian Press
By Canadian Press Staff, November 5, 2025
Prince Harry gestures, as he departs, following his visit to Centre for Blast Injury Studies at Imperial College London, in London, Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. (Suzanne Plunkett, Pool Photo via AP)
Prince Harry is set to begin a two-day visit to Toronto to attend events supporting veterans and the military community ahead of Remembrance Day.
The office of the Duke of Sussex says he’s making the trip at the invitation of the True Patriot Love Foundation, which supports Canadian military members, veterans and their families.
Prince Harry has several engagements today, including a private lunch followed by an evening fundraiser for the HALO Trust – a U.K.-based charity that helps clear explosives around the world and was also supported by his late mother, Diana.
Prince Harry, who served in Afghanistan as a member of the British military, is also set to meet some of Canada’s oldest veterans at Sunnybrook Hospital’s veterans centre on Thursday.
He will then attend a dinner organized by True Patriot Love in support of the military community.
Prince Harry’s last visit to Canada was in February, when he attended the Invictus Games in British Columbia.
3)Andrew’s royal exit is the latest crisis for Britain’s monarchy
Courtesy Barrie360.com and The Associated Press
By Jill Lawless and Brian Melley, November 2, 2025
Holding prestige but not power, Britain’s monarchy is finely tuned to public sentiment.
That’s been evident with the disgrace of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, who was stripped of his princely title and his spacious home by his brother King Charles on Thursday, a banishment that has left the disgraced royal increasingly exposed to scrutiny both in the U.K. and the U.S. over his friendship with the deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Following years of scandals related to Andrew, Charles arguably took the biggest step of his reign by seeking to insulate the monarchy from any further scandals relating to Andrew and his connections with Epstein, who took his own life in prison in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, more than a decade after his initial conviction.
It’s not the first time the current iteration of the British monarchy — the House of Windsor — has been in crisis over the past century and where the future of the institution has been threatened.
World War I
George Gross, a royal expert at King’s College London, said the most recent precedent for what has happened to Andrew is the 1917 Titles Deprivation Act, which “saw various members of loosely affiliated royals and dukes and members of the peerage losing titles if they had sided with Germany in the First World War.”
The royal families of Europe are intertwined, and Britain’s is heavily German, especially after Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, with whom she had nine children.
When Britain and Germany went to war in 1914, some members of the wider British royal family found themselves on opposing sides.
Britain’s King George V changed the family name from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor in 1917, and initiated legislation to strike out the titles of princes and lords “who have, during the present war, borne arms against His Majesty or His Allies, or who have adhered to His Majesty’s enemies.”
One target was Prince Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, who was a U.K. royal and also a prince of Hanover. His title was removed for being an enemy of Britain under the 1917 act, which was enacted in 1919, once the war was over.
According to the House of Commons Library, “this was the first and only time such a title has been removed in this way.”
The abdication
The relationship between Edward, Prince of Wales, and U.S. socialite Wallis Simpson was a headache that turned into a constitutional crisis. Simpson was twice divorced, and Edward, the heir to the throne, was destined to be ceremonial head of the Church of England, which did not allow divorced people to remarry in church.
The prince became King Edward VIII when his father King George V died in early 1936. He continued to say he wanted to marry Simpson, despite the opposition of the British government.
Forced to choose between duty and passion, he gave up the throne in December 1936, announcing in a radio broadcast that “I have found it impossible … to discharge my duties as king as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.”
The news was a surprise to many in Britain, though not beyond it. British newspapers had not reported on the relationship, and American magazines had offending articles cut out before going on sale.
The abdication set the monarchy on a new course. Edward’s younger brother took the throne as King George VI. He was succeeded by his daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, and after her 70-year reign by her son, King Charles III. All doubled down on the idea that the monarch’s primary attribute should be a sense of duty — something Edward, in the popular imagination, lacked.
Edward and Wallis, now the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and suspected by some of Nazi sympathies, were sent to the Bahamas, where he served as governor. After the war they mostly stayed away from Britain, living a life of nomadic luxury.
Princess Diana’s death
The death of Princess Diana — the ex-wife of Charles — in a car crash in Paris in 1997 at the age of 36 shocked the world and left her family, including sons William and Harry, then 15 and 12, in mourning.
The strength of public feeling caught the royal family by surprise. Mounds of floral tributes piled up outside the gates of Buckingham Palace and Diana’s Kensington Palace home to mourn a princess who had been ostracized by the royal family after her divorce from Charles in 1992.
The queen was at Balmoral in Scotland on her summer holiday with her husband Prince Philip, Charles, William and Harry. The family kept their grief private and stuck to routine — taking the ashen-faced boys to church on Sunday morning — and the queen did not issue a statement for several days.
She was advised to make a public display of grief by Prime Minister Tony Blair, who perfectly caught the public mood with his own tribute calling Diana “the people’s princess.”
After newspaper headlines urging “Speak to us Ma’am” and “Show us you care,” the queen made a live televised address to the nation on the eve of Diana’s funeral.
“What I say to you now, as your queen and as a grandmother, I say from my heart,” the queen said, acknowledging the country’s grief, praising Diana and promising to cherish her memory.
The trouble with Harry
Until the Epstein scandal reared up again last year, Andrew had been trying to regain favor with the family. He may have benefited indirectly from the trouble with Prince Harry, who was the source of most of the drama at the time outside of the family’s high-profile medical problems.
Harry became estranged from his father and older brother, Prince William, heir to the throne, when he and his wife, Meghan, stepped down from their working roles and moved to California in 2020. The couple famously aired their grievances with the royal family in a tell-all interview to Oprah Winfrey and a revealing Netflix series. Harry, also known as the Duke of Sussex, then fueled the tensions by revealing personal conversations in his memoir, “Spare.”
Harry also broke from royal protocol in turning to the courts to sort out his legal problems. He became the first senior royal to testify in court in more than a century in his successful phone hacking lawsuit against the Daily Mirror.
A failed legal effort to restore his police protection detail that was stripped from him when he left royal work, though, was seen as an attack on his father’s government.
When the courts finally rejected the lawsuit, it provide a chance for a reunion between father and son. The two shared a cup of tea at Charles’ London abode, Clarence House, in September. It was their first meeting in over a year. It lasted less than an hour.
