Delphine Boël
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Delphine Boël is a Belgian artist who specializes in papier maché sculpture. She is alleged to be the illegitimate daughter of Albert II of Belgium.
[edit] Biography
Born on February 22, 1968, she is the daughter of Sybille, Baroness de Selys Longchamps, whose husband was Jacques Boël, scion of a family of industrialists. Delphine has one daughter, Joséphine.
[edit] Paternity allegations
On October 19, 1999, a Flemish biographer, Mario Danneels, published his unofficial biography of Queen Paola, Paola, van la dolce vita tot koningin (Paola, from dolce vita to Queen). The book contained a statement referring to the existence of a daughter born out of wedlock to King Albert. The Belgian press seized upon this statement and made investigations into the identity of this daughter, tracing Delphine Boël. At first, both Delphine and her mother refused to comment on the matter, and the Palace dismissed Danneel's book as gossip.
The main element considered by the Belgian press as acknowledgment that Delphine is the King's daughter is a short extract from the King's 1999 Christmas speech: "This Christmas feast is also the occasion for each of us to think to one's own family, to one's happy periods but also to one's difficult moments. The Queen and I have remembered very happy periods but also the crisis that our couple have crossed more than 30 years ago. Together We could, very longtime ago already, surpass those difficulties and find back a deep understanding and love. This period have been recalled to Us short ago. We don't wish to enter into explanations ("nous apesantir" in French) on that subject which belongs to our privacy. But, if certain people who meet today similar problems could get some reasons to hope from our lived experience, We would be so happy." The press interpret this to refer to the King's affair with Sybille de Selys Longchamps.
Delphine gave an interview on May 15, 2005, to the France 3 presenter Marc-Olivier Fogiel (French) in the broadcast "On ne peut pas plaire à tout le monde" in which she claimed that she was indeed the daughter of the King. She said she made a telephone call to King Albert II in order to receive help for her mother who was being harrassed by journalists. According to her statement, the King replied "Let me alone with that story. You are not my daughter." which she said was hurtful. She said she felt the absence of contact from him, especially since she is a mother herself. In the same interview, she alleged that when she and her mother moved to England when she was 9, King Albert wished to divorce his Queen and join them. Her mother apparently opposed this because of the political consequences for the King. Delphine added that her "parents" kept in touch by telephone for some years, but that this stopped some time before she was 16 (1984). She said her mother told her "the truth" about her parentage when she turned 18, in 1986.
Although King Albert does not acknowledge that he is her father, Delphine's paternity link with the King is often considered as fact by the press and, hence, by the population. She is sometimes compared with Mazarine Pingeot, the illegitimate daughter of former French President François Mitterrand, and nicknamed "the Mazarine of Belgium". The possibility of Delphine being the natural daughter of Jacques Boël is given less prominence: in consideration of a possible family resemblance between Delphine and Queen Astrid of Belgium, King Albert II's mother, no photos of Jacques Boël were ever presented to look for family resemblance with him.
There has been no formal proof of Delphine Boël's claim, as a paternity test has not been carried out.
[edit] External links
- Articles :
- Fogiel's interview reported on May 19, 2005 by Michel Bouffioulx (French).
- Interview with Sybille de Selys Longchamps by Michel Bouffioulx, June 2005 (French).