Guernsey Press

William and Kate meet Windrush veterans

The Prince of Wales hugged his way around a group of the Windrush generation and their descendants during a visit to Cardiff.

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The Prince of Wales hugged his was way round a room of Windrush veterans as he celebrated the Caribbeans who helped rebuild postwar Britain – but drew the line at kissing.

William was joined by wife Kate for his visit to Cardiff to meet the elderly group and Windrush descendants, after he promised a community leader he would make the trip which marked the start of Black History Month.

The couple received a boisterous welcome from their host, Professor Uzo Iwobi, founder of the African Community Centre Wales and Race Council Cymru, and their invited guests who included members from Windrush Cymru Elders and Black History Cymru 365.

William and Kate meet schoolchildren
The Prince and Princess of Wales meet schoolchildren during a visit to the Grange Pavilion in Cardiff (Jacob King/PA)

And the couple showed off their table tennis skills when they joined members of the Grange Pavilion Youth Forum for a game of table tennis.

William had promised Prof Iwobi he would travel to Cardiff and meet the elders, after she insisted the prince visit when he made her a CBE earlier this year, for services to race equality and championing diversity and cohesion.

Kate laughs
Kate and William met members of the Windrush Cymru Elders, Black History Cymru 365, and the Ethnic Minority Youth Forum for Wales (Jacob King/PA)

Karen Lucock, 65, received a hug from William and recounting it later she laughed and said: “I said, ‘Please can I have a hug?’ He said, ‘Yes you can.’ I was surprised because he hugged me for quite a while. I am in a bit of shock!”

Her friend Yvonne Howard-Bunt did not want to miss out and when she asked: “Can I have one of what she has just had?” And the prince agreed.

The prince and princess quizzed the Windrush group about their experiences and Kate heard about the discrimination one woman faced from the parents of her playmates.

Royal visit to Cardiff
The royal couple heard about the contribution the Windrush generation has had on the Welsh community (Geoff Caddick/PA)

Kate asked about the changes she had seen over the decades and the 69-year-old said: “I told her the story of how, when I was playing with the other kids, because I was black their mothers would come out and call them inside.

“That’s how it was then but now the grandchildren of the Windrush generation and the grandchildren of white families can play together.”

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