Britain’s head of state, King Charles III, turns 76 on Thursday, still undergoing cancer treatment but with his love for work unwavering despite what his son and heir, Prince William, has described as a “brutal” year.
Charles suspended royal duties in February after being diagnosed with an unknown cancer. Two and a half months later, at the end of April, he returned to work.
“The problem is trying to stop him,” his wife, Queen Camilla, has said on many occasions.
Last month, the pair began their international trips, with the king interrupting his treatment to visit Australia and Samoa for a Commonwealth heads of government conference.
According to those close to him, Charles returned “invigorated” from the 11-day trip, and one palace official claimed the monarch planned to resume a “normal” schedule of abroad excursions next year.
His determination to carry out his civic obligations may be inspired by the fact that when he succeeded his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, he was the longest-serving heir apparent in British history, at 70 years.
When Elizabeth died on September 8, 2022, Charles took the throne and swore to fulfil his constitutional position “throughout the remaining time God grants me.”
Last Sunday, William led the nation in a two-minute silence at London’s Cenotaph memorial to honour British soldiers slain in battle since 1914, one of the most important dates on the royal calendar.
The previous evening, Charles attended a commemoration concert at the Royal Albert Hall with his son William and daughter-in-law Catherine, Princess of Wales, who had recently undergone chemotherapy for her own cancer diagnosis.
After hosting Bahrain’s monarch on Tuesday, Charles hosted a reception for the British film and television industry at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday, followed by the world premiere of “Gladiator II.”.
His birthday will be celebrated with ceremonial gun salutes, as is customary on monarchs’ birthdays, but there will be no day off.
Charles will be in south London to open a surplus food redistribution site and view a newly constructed industrial freezer.
The hub is part of his “Coronation Food Project,” which began on his 75th birthday and aims to combat food waste and assist those in need.
The royal family has faced numerous challenges in the year since Charles’ previous birthday.
Charles is mainly alienated from his younger son Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, and a recent documentary made damning charges about both Charles’ and William’s financial situation.
At the Commonwealth conference, there were also more calls for reparations for slavery caused by Britain’s colonial control.
Buckingham Palace declared Charles’ cancer a few weeks after a prostate operation, but clarified that it was not prostate cancer.
The type has yet to be revealed. Then, in March, two months after a severe abdominal operation, Catherine, possibly the most popular member of the royal family, declared she had cancer, without saying which sort.
Catherine, 42, surprised her many followers by announcing the completion of her chemotherapy on September 9 in a much-acclaimed video broadcast on social media. She has gradually returned to royal duties.
“Honestly, it’s been awful. It’s probably been the hardest year in my life,” William said earlier this month during a visit to South Africa.
“I’m so proud of my wife; I’m proud of my father for handling the things that they have done,” William added.
“But from a personal family point of view, it’s been, yeah, it’s been brutal,” he said.