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Why are Norwegians falling out of love with the monarchy?

A princess who speaks to angels and a self-proclaimed shaman who sells pricey healing medallions: the unusual couple are madly in love but struggling to win hearts in Norway.

Pictured is Martha Louise
A controversial royal couple have led to declining popularity for the monarchy in Norway. Pictured: Norway's Princess Martha Louise watches the action in an Equestrian event Photo by BEN Stansall / AFP

Martha Louise, the divorced 51-year-old daughter of Norway’s king and queen, has rebuilt her life with Durek Verrett, a popular Hollywood spiritual guru.

The princess and Shaman Durek, as he is known to his star followers such as Gwyneth Paltrow and Antonio Banderas, announced their engagement in June, with King Harald’s blessing.

But the romance has not gone down well in Norway because the African-American “sixth generation shaman” suggested cancer is a choice in his book “Spirit Hacking”.

He has also recommended exercises to remove “imprints” from women’s vaginas left by previous sexual partners.

And on his website, he sells a medallion — for $222 — dubbed a “Spirit Optimizer” which he claims helped him overcome Covid. All of which has raised eyebrows in no-nonsense Norway.ž

“He’s an imposter, a charlatan and a crook,” according to columnist and humourist Dagfinn Nordbo.

Racism?

A poll last month found 17 percent of Norwegians now have a lower opinion of the royal family, nearly all citing the princess and the shaman as the reason.

The criticism comes amid debate over the role of monarchy in many European countries, with several royal houses announcing moves to slim down and modernise.

Denmark and Sweden have cut back their households, and Britain is reportedly considering the same under King Charles.

Norway’s monarchy has long enjoyed broad support, due largely to its down-to-earth ways, with 85-year-old King Harald – who married a commoner – known for adopting the country’s progressive values.

While Verrett has said he understands his beliefs may be unsettling for some, he claims he is a victim of racism — echoing fellow African-American Meghan Markle complaints since she joined Britain’s royal family.

“White people write all this hate and death threats to us and all this stuff for being together because… they don’t want to see a black man in the royal family,” he said in a video posted to Instagram on June 9.

Martha Louise said she was “really shocked” to see how he and “black people and people of colour get treated.”

Oslo’s former mayor, Fabian Stang, is one of the few to have spoken out in support of the couple.

“Selling medallions to bring good health is going too far… but it’s strange that so many of those who hate Durek had nothing against the Snasa man,” he wrote on Facebook in a reference to a famous Norwegian faith healer who died last year.

“In 2022, should we not be able to welcome Durek with open arms and invite him to a serious debate on the line between science and hoax?”

Still, more than half of Norwegians want Martha Louise to renounce her title of princess, recent polls show. Several groups of healthcare professionals have also dropped the princess as a patron because of her fiance’s penchant for alternative medicine.

Culture clash

This is not the first time Martha Louise, fourth in the line of succession behind her younger brother Crown Prince Haakon and his two children, has courted controversy.

A fan of alternative therapies, she claims to be able to speak with angels, a gift she has shared — and profited from — in books and courses.

She lost her honorific “Her Royal Highness” in 2002 when she withdrew from royal duties to be a clairvoyant, and in 2019 she agreed not to use her princess title in her commercial endeavours.

Her first husband, the flamboyant writer Ari Behn, with whom she has three daughters, also made waves.

He committed suicide in 2019, three years after their divorce. This time the eccentricities displayed by the princess and Shaman Durek appear to be too much for normally phlegmatic Norwegians.

“The royal family is meant to be a unifying force. The problem is that Martha Louise and Durek Verrett are exactly the opposite: controversial and polarising with suspicions of charlatanism,” said historian Trond Noren Isaksen.

“Most Norwegians despise the fact that you can make money off of what they consider to be nonsense that comes with the stamp of approval from a princess.”

According to celebrity magazines, King Harald, Martha Louise and Crown Prince Haakon have held “crisis meetings” to discuss whether the princess can retain her title.

So far the king has said very little about his future son-in-law, referring only to a “culture clash”.

“Something has to be done,” Noren Isaksen insisted.

“The royal couple have to reconcile two priorities — of parents who want to see their children live happy lives… and protecting the crown so that it will continue to shine brightly for another thousand years.”

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ROYAL FAMILY

Ailing King Harald of Norway returning from Malaysia

King Harald of Norway was returning home from Malaysia on Sunday, the royal palace said, after falling ill and spending several days in hospital while on holiday.

Ailing King Harald of Norway returning from Malaysia

The oldest reigning monarch in Europe at 87 years old, Harald contracted an infection while on a trip to the island of Langkawi and was admitted to hospital on Tuesday.

The palace said on Saturday that he had been fitted with a “temporary” pacemaker, which his personal physician said would make his return safer.

On Sunday, the palace said in a statement that Harald would “soon be on his way to Langkawi Airport for medical transportation”, and would be joined by the queen.

“Upon arrival in Norway, His Majesty will be admitted to the hospital Rikshospitalet,” the statement continued.

“His Majesty will be on sick leave for two weeks.”

A medical plane believed to be transporting the king took off from Langkawi on Sunday, after police escorted a convoy that included an ambulance from the hospital to the airport, an AFP journalist saw.

Langkawi air traffic control earlier told AFP that the SAS plane was due to depart on Sunday.

The flight is due to land in Oslo at 2259 GMT, according to specialist website Flightradar.

Harald needs crutches to get around and has suffered a series of health issues in recent years.

In January, he caught a respiratory infection days after dismissing speculation that he might abdicate, following the lead of distant cousin Queen Margrethe II in Denmark.

In his absence, Crown Prince Haakon, 50, has stepped in as regent.

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