Home » Odds & Ends » The Abdul Diaries

The Abdul Diaries

Karim was recruited to wait tables during Queen Victoria’s golden jubilee in 1887.

By
Font size: Decrease font Enlarge font
New diaries shed light on the intense relationship between Queen Victoria and her Indian Muslim servant Abdul Karim at the height of the British Raj.

 
Karim was recruited to wait tables during Queen Victoria’s golden jubilee in 1887, and in a year began instructing her in Urdu and Indian affairs.

According to Shrabani Basu, author of Victoria and Abdul: “In letters to him over the years between his arrival in the UK and her death in 1901, the queen signed letters to him as ‘your loving mother’ and ‘your closest friend’ …. On some occasions, she even signed off her letters with a flurry of kisses — a highly unusual thing to do at that time.”

Basu, who doubts that the two were lovers, nonetheless said: “It was unquestionably a passionate relationship — a relationship which I think operated on many different layers in addition to the mother-and-son ties between a young Indian man and a woman who at the time was over 60 years old.”

 

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (0 posted)

total: | displaying:

Post your comment

  • Bold
  • Italic
  • Underline
  • Quote

Please enter the code you see in the image:

Captcha
  • Email Email
  • Print Print

Tagged as:

Odds & Ends | Magazine | April 2011

Rate this article

0
Submit Link

We are looking for the best Indian stories on the web. If you see something interesting, send us a link to the story.