
This was a safe space for him. Amongst charity workers, donors and friends, he spoke of the love and happiness he had found with Meghan, of honouring his mother’s legacy, and described his “sadness” at leaving the UK.
“Together, you have given me an education about living, and this role has taught me more about what is right and just than I could ever have imagined,” he told dinner guests.
“We are taking a leap of faith, so thank you for giving me the courage to take this next step.”
Sentebale had been part of Prince Harry’s world for his entire adult life. It had ridden the storm of family fallout and leaving royal life behind.
He first visited Lesotho, the landlocked mountain kingdom in southern Africa, when he was 19, in 2004. He’d just left Eton and was on a gap year before his military training at Sandhurst.
It was a formative time for Harry.
What he saw during his gap year prompted him to set up the charity two years later.
It would support children who had lost parents to HIV and Aids.
And then there is the Diana factor. Sentebale means “forget-me-not” in Sesotho, the language of Lesotho.
Back at that Sentebale dinner in 2020, he told guests: “When I lost my mum… you took me under your wing. You looked out for me for so long.”
The connection to Diana, Princess of Wales, is an important personal part of the Sentebale story.