Photo: G. Luci and E. Mathon /Palais Princier de Monaco
Prince Albert and Princess Charlene, along with twins Hereditary Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriela, watched the traditional procession marking Good Friday from the Palace windows yesterday evening.
The procession, whose origin dates back to the beginning of the 18th century, is organised by the Venerable Archconfraternity of Mercy and recounts the story represented in the paintings of the Passion of Christ.
Photo: G. Luci and E. Mathon /Palais Princier de Monaco
At nightfall, the lights of the Rock were veiled as the procession moved off to the sound of funeral music played by the Municipal Music. Clergy and penitents walked through the narrow streets of the Rock, followed by many faithful.
The ritual march passed twice in front of the Place du Palais, under the eyes of the Princely Family, and ended at the Cathedral for a moment of prayer and meditation, led by the Petits Chanteurs de Monaco.
Photo: G. Luci and E. Mathon /Palais Princier de Monaco
As every year, Monaco Town Council is holding two Easter events for children including the popular egg hunts at the Exotic Garden and at Parc Princesse Antoinette.
La Condamine’s Market will also celebrate Easter, on Saturday, March 31, from 10 am to 11:30 am, with a live farmyard including lamb, sheep, chickens and chicks, rabbits and piglets to delight the little ones. As an added bonus, between 10:30 am and 11:30 am, a rabbit mascot will walk around the square and market halls to distribute eggs.
Photo: Facebook Mairie de Monaco
Also on Saturday between 10 am and 11:30 am, the Jardin Exotique will host the now famous hunt for exotic plants. Children will have to find small hidden plants and will leave, once their mission is completed, with a packet of chocolate eggs. Two sessions are planned: one at 10 am with another at 11 am (registration is required on +377 93 15 29 80). Entrance to the Garden is free for a child and his or her chaperone.
On Sunday, April 1, from 2 pm to 5 pm, the eighth edition of the Egg Hunt will be in full swing in Princess Antoinette Park accompanied by fun workshops with chocolate eggs. The session, with on-site registration on the day, is open to school children up to 12 years old enrolled in the Principality.
Sixteen teams from 13 countries will participate in the 8th Saint Devote Tournament on Saturday, March 31, at the Louis II Stadium.
Organised by the Monegasque Rugby Federation in collaboration with the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation in order to celebrate rugby and its different approaches, the day promises to be particularly intense.
Princess Charlene said: “The Saint Devote Rugby Tournament continues to grow each year. I am happy to say once again that sport is a vehicle for exchanges, for surpassing oneself starting at a young age and for creating friendships across borders.
“I wish all the participants a wonderful day, to be shared in the spirit of fair play. I would also like to thank all the people who contribute their time and effort to this rugby tournament, which has turned into a true international event.”
Frédéric Michalak – four-time winner of the Six Nations Tournament and of the European Cup, two-time French Champion – will be present to encourage and give valuable advice to the young players.
The day will include an U12-category Tournament, the Saint Devote Challenge, and Tots Rugby, which is an introduction to rugby for children from three to five.
The purpose of this tournament is to highlight the values of rugby, dear to the Princess’ Foundation, beyond its physical aspects. These events illustrate team spirit and the notions of generosity, sharing, solidarity and respect which help children accept themselves as they are in order to better integrate into society.
The day starts at 8:45 am and ends at 5:30 pm with the Awards Ceremony.
ML: How did you end up in Monaco? MA: After finishing my Masters in France, I was planning to go live in England where I’d found a job in marketing.
But one evening, while I was heading to a new pub in Old Nice, I got lost so stopped to ask someone for directions. This passerby in fact accompanied me to the pub in question and eventually became my husband. I never went to the UK and ended up moving to Monaco in 1994.
ML: Child CARE Monaco is a Monegasque association created in 2012. Why and how did you create it? MA: In 2011, we took a family trip around the world. I told my children, then aged 8 and 10, that we had to thank all the wonderful people we were going to meet during this world tour and combine a humanitarian aspect with our exploration of our beautiful planet.
In India, we met street children in a centre where a man named Mr Ramesh Paliwal was helping them to “re-socialise”. I asked my children what we could do for them and we bought school supplies and organised a snack together. When Ramesh told me about the circumstances of these children and his work with them … I promised to come back and help them. Which I did when we finished our world travels, because it wasn’t just about buying them pens and candies and then abandoning them.
I kept my promise. Ramesh had also told me about these girls from a village near Udaipur who needed to be educated and helped. We went together and had a school built.
Returning from our trip, I created the Child CARE Monaco Association. I gathered support for this cause from all my friends, who continue to support me and then had the idea of organising a Women’s Car Rally that raises funds for the running of the school and for the associated costs.
My two children continue to be involved in this great cause and understand the importance of education and respect for others with these social differences.
The value of a person depends on his actions, not who he claims to be.
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
ML: Can you give us some of Child CARE Monaco’s key facts and figures? MA: The school costs around €15,000 per year to run, which includes education, uniforms, basic care, two meals a day, and wages, plus the additional costs of school maintenance (painting, electricity surplus, last minute expenses, etc).
I organise child sponsorship – 149 €/year per child – to help keep things running smoothly and provide for every student.
The association is made up of me as Founding President, Vice-President Annie Battaglia, Secretary Dominique Revelly and Treasurer Bernhard Ackermann. We also have other volunteers: Caroline Healey (with whom I am in India at the moment), Ella Miscrikhanova, who has accompanied me to India, Michael Vassalo, Desire Levaillant, Igor Malyskhov and Gersende Chialvetto.
ML: What are your goals? What are your achievements in India (school, bikes, etc)? MA: The primary objective is for girls to go to school safely without fear of being raped, kidnapped, or abused on the way, as well as to have health facilities worthy of the name, which is not the case in the majority of schools in India, and is the source of many problems because no access to sanitation means no privacy.
Also, you have to understand that girls in India represent a burden for families because of the dowry, and because boys take priority when it comes to education. Girls are not taken into account. Why educate them when they will always be the “maids” of their future husband’s families.
So in 2012, I first visited the village of Trestha, Rajasthan, where I met with the chief about the importance of having a school in the village to educate the girls. The chief has always given me his full support and is both motivated and involved in the project.
In 2013, we opened the first school in a grain warehouse that the chief had put at our disposal as a test and to show the villagers the changes in the village.
From 60 girls we went up to 105, and now have a waiting list. Our school has become a model in the region not so much for the quality of education as for the infrastructure and equipment. The government has paid for the construction of the road from the village to the school.
Then in November 2017, I went back to distribute bicycles that we were able to buy for the school girlsthanks to our donations and sponsors.
4th edition Ladies Vintage Child CARE Charity Rally 2017. Photo: Monaco Life
ML: Tell us about your annual women-only vintage car rally in September. MA: The idea of organising a women’s vintage car rally came to me one morning. I wanted to put together an all-female event to show solidarity and to fight for a good cause while at the same time being glamorous and combining business with pleasure.
So every year, I suggest a theme – last year it was Gingham style – so that everyone is dressed the same and comfortably. No labels, no visible luxury logos. We are here for a cause: female solidarity and the education of girls.
We leave Monaco in the morning from the Café de Paris with a road book, and travel the beautiful landscapes of the French Riviera before returning to Castelroc, at the Place du Palais in the evening, where Prince Albert gives us the great honour of awarding one of the prizes to a winning team, and then we finish off with a cocktail.
I would also thank the government for their support and encouragement: Stéphan Valeri, President of the National Council; Jacques Pastor, 4th Deputy Mayor Delegate Sports and Recreation Department; Patrice Cellario, Minister of the Interior, Jacques Medecin, Ambassador of Monaco in India; Virginie Cotta, Chief of Staff for Mr Valeri; and Gery Mestre, President of the Automobile Collection Committee of the Automobile Club of Monaco.
Fabrice Leroy from Rent-a-classic-car in Nice supplies many of the vehicles although some ladies drive their own cars.
This year’s rally will take place on Sunday, September 16, and for this fifth edition it’s a nautical theme … Sea, Sun and Stripes.
ML: Your only other annual fundraiser is a gala dinner in December? MA: Yes, the association’s other big event is a gala dinner which takes place early December at the Salon Bellevue at the Café de Paris – this year it will be on Saturday, December 8.
This is really about the opportunity to get members together and thank them for their support, and to screen the film of our last trip to India – to show the school, the schoolgirls, the delivery of the bicycles, for example, the celebrations and the girls dancing. It’s so important to show this film, to help everyone visualise the work we do on the spot and the evolution of one year over another.
ML: How does membership work? Do you need volunteers or assistance to organise the Car Rally? MA: There is no membership. People who wish to sponsor the education of a child for one year for €149 have the opportunity to receive e-mail photos, as much as possible.
I always emphasise the fact that we are all volunteers. We cannot pay someone on site to take pictures every month and send them. When I’m in India, I do my best with the limited time we spend with the girls to take pictures and e-mail them to families. Then at Christmas, a group photo, a photo for Diwali usually accompanied by a drawing.
I also have to explain to sponsoring families that unfortunately, we are not immune to the possibility of arranged marriages, that the girls stop school to get married and go live with a good family.
We are happy to have seen a decrease in this practice but we cannot go against ancestral traditions.
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
ML: Describe what life is like for the girls you help. How does it affect your life? MA: In the morning, the girls start school depending on the season. The day begins with song and then yoga. After they have classes like mathematics, English, Hindi, geography, drawing. The fastest schoolgirls can go to the library to read books and get ahead in their work in English.
After school, it’s not uncommon for them to go to work with the parents in the peanut fields, cotton fields, wheat fields, or lentil fields. Some bring in the goats and the others prepare the meal several times a week. For this reason there is no homework. They are very motivated to go to school and some teach their mothers to count and read stories. Several mothers have come to tell me and to thank me.
I am very happy to see it this way because the first time I went to the village it was very different. They had a very harsh look, never smiling. They had never seen a blonde woman with white skin and I intrigued them.
Now more than six years after that first meeting, they take my hand and do not want to let go, and often families invite me to their home for tea or coffee. They are much less sick than before. They have emancipated themselves, became self-confident, and became flirtatious.
It makes me happy to see them evolve and motivated to become “someone” as they say.
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
ML: You are in India at this moment. What are you doing there? Describe the life you see. MA: I am currently in India because we have just built an enclosed area to park the bicycles and caretaker’s cabin, and I wanted to check that everything is in line with what we had planned.
Also, I had asked to build two new games for the school playground and install surveillance cameras … because the school is a victim of its success; it’s attracting the curious and I don’t want our equipment to disappear into thin air.
Ganshyam Paliwal, the school supervisor, and Ramesh asked me to come and inaugurate the new spaces.
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
Usually when I’m here, I distribute letters and gifts to sponsors’ families. I make sure to take a picture of each girl with her present and her drawings, which I then send by email to the sponsors. This is the hardest and longest part of my trip, and usually takes 2 to 3 days.
I also spend time in each class where I speak in English and evaluate a student’s level from one year to the next. On site, we play games to build the girls’ confidence. When Annie accompanies me in October, she takes care of the creative workshops, such as drawing in the library and designing cards for the sponsors.
Right now I’m here with Caroline. She presented each class with a lesson on hygiene and explained how to drink water properly. On my side, I taught them how to tell time. I brought small clocks .. and they loved it!
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
ML: You are one of the Monaco’s most social people, as documented on your FB page. You have a busy family life, where do you find the energy to go to all these events? MA: I like life and I like people. I am curious and I adapt to all situations. My energy stems from my curiosity. I love giving my time to others and making them happy as best I can. Their happiness feeds me with positive energy that I can in turn pass on to others.
ML: What do you hope your own children learn from your mission in India? MA: Carla and Theo, who have the chance to live in a clean, safe environment, to go to school, to eat to their heart’s content, and to travel around the world with us, know that this is not necessarily the same case for all children.
They both help me with the association and have understood that happiness is also about sharing, about keeping it simple and about being open to others. And to be curious while believing in yourself and your dreams. If they understand that and live by that, I will have given them the best education.
Photo: Facebook Martine Ackermann
ML: You live in two worlds different complements – Monaco and India. How do you manage both? MA: Yes, I live in two completely different worlds but I am the same person, Martine Ackermann. I am still me and my values don’t change, just my comfort.
For me, the value of a person matters more than everything else. At the moment I’m in India, in the middle of a power outage so no water … I’m going to heat the water for my shower … I’m surrounded by great people as I write and life is a simple happiness when you do not ask too much.
I like “bling bling” because I can use it to have fun but not to exist.
For more on Child CARE Monaco, see www.childcaremonaco.com. Article first published March 28, 2018.
Charlotte Casiraghi appeared at the Monaco Rose Ball on Saturday, March 24, sporting a diamond ring, sending the media into a frenzy about an engagement to Dimitri Rassam, the film producer.
The 31-year-old daughter of HRH Princess Caroline has been involved with the 36-year-old for the past year, according to a number of reports. The Princess arrived at the black tie gala– one of the main social events of the year in the Principality – at the Salle des Etoiles with Karl Lagerfeld, a long-time friend and the event’s designer.
Also attending with Charlotte and Dimitri were her brother, Pierre, and his wife Beatrice, and half-sister Princess Alexandra of Hanover, eighteen.
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Palais Princier de Monaco
Earlier this month, HELLO!’s sister publication, HOLA! reported that Charlotte and Dimitri will soon be walking up the aisle. According to the Spanish weekly, the couple will marry this summer in Sicily, where Dimitri’s mother, actress Carole Bouquet, has a stunning villa.
The annual spring Bal de la Rose, first held in 1954 by Princess Grace, is the main fundraiser for the Princess Grace Foundation, which is chaired by Princess Caroline. The foundation’s aim is to help people and children in need by developing humanitarian and philanthropic projects.
Other guests at Saturday’s gala included Minister of State Serge Telle, SBM CEO Jean-Luc Biamonti, model Victoria Silvstedt and producer Lady Monica Bacardi.
A former executive at Monaco-based Unaoil will not be extradited to the UK to face corruption charges, according to a report by MLex, the reputable media outlet specialising in financial coverage.
A court official allegedly told MLex that Prince Albert rejected a request by UK fraud prosecutors to extradite Saman Ahsani, Unaoil’s former commercial director, following an “adverse opinion” from Monaco’s Court of Appeal. The ruling can’t be appealed, a court official said.
The allegations against Mr Ahsani were not liable for criminal prosecution under Monaco’s laws at the time they were alleged to have occurred, the official added. The decision was made on February 28, but had not been made public until now.
Mr Ahsani has not been charged with any offence and has denied wrongdoing.
The UK had opened a criminal probe into Unaoil to investigate suspected bribery, corruption and money-laundering two years ago following allegations in the Australian press.