Michelle Obama, wife of former US President Barack Obama, said that what Meghan Markle, the wife of British Prince Harry, told about a comment from a member of the British royal family about the darkness of her son's complexion before his birth is heartbreaking, and that she hopes that Meghan's experience will be a lesson to the world.

Megan and Harry accused a member of the royal family of raising racist concerns about their son, and the courtiers were accused of ignoring Megan's request for help when she was suffering from suicidal tendencies.

The royal family is facing its biggest crisis since the death of Princess Diana, Harry's mother, in 1997, because of Meghan and her husband's interview with the famous American broadcaster Oprah Winfrey.

The former American first lady told NBC News, in response to a question about what Megan had said about her comment on the color of her son's skin, “I feel it is heartbreaking. She felt like she was in her family, (but) her family didn’t think about her with this. Method.

And Michelle Obama added - according to Reuters news agency - "As I said before, race is not a new problem in the world of people of color, so it is not entirely surprising that we hear what I felt and see it express it."

"I think and what I hope for and what I think is that this is one family in the first place. I pray for forgiveness and recovery so that they can take this as a lesson for all of us."

Meghan Markle, Prince Harry and their child, who questioned the degree of his darkness before he was born (networking sites)

Last Tuesday, Queen Elizabeth said that members of the British royal family were saddened by the difficult experiences of her grandson Harry and his wife, and she promised to address, in a private context, what Megan revealed about racist statements about their son.

Harry, Harry's older brother, also denied that the British royal family was "racist".

The television interview of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry with the American journalist Oprah Winfrey sparked a storm of controversy, and is expected to provoke subsequent crises with Buckingham Palace in the coming days, just as the late Princess Diana's historical interview with the BBC 26 years ago. .