After this video went viral, there was panic on the internet
People around the world paid tribute to Queen Elizabeth II during her funeral on Monday. Britain’s longest-reigning monarch died on 8 September. Thousands gathered in central London to queue near the coffin of Queen Elizabeth at Westminster Hall. After hours of waiting, the mourners bid him a final farewell in front of the coffin. Some bowed their heads and some knelt down and prayed. Now, a video of one of the mourners paying their last respects in a unique way has surfaced on the internet.
Eager social media users posted a video of the man, whom they said was a non-resident Indian (NRI), seen breaking a queue, folding hands, dropping a coin, and bowing to the queen for making payments. was spotted. His respect. The video was posted by a Twitter user, Jassa with a caption, “I am so amazed, someone tell me why this Lankbutter is bowing to Rani. Somebody gather your uncle.”
Check out the video here:
I am very surprised, someone tell me why this Lankbutter is bowing to Rani.
someone collects his uncle ffs pic.twitter.com/NNiNEwwdFU
— jassa (@jassa84) September 14, 2022
After this video went viral, there was panic on the internet. One user wrote, “He gave a coin to the just-dead queen and said Shashikala I’m rolling,” while another user commented, “He actually put the coin in the forehead too, yes, There is a royal kingdom with the queen. The crown which is decorated with Kohinoor. It doesn’t need any coins, man.” The third commented, “He’s expecting a straight anchor.”
Huge crowds gathered in London to watch the Queen’s flag-wrapped coffin, over which the Imperial State Crown, her orb and the scepter were carried, which was carried in a gun carriage from Westminster Hall of Parliament, where it was in the state from 14 September. Was lying.
To the tune of pipes and drums, the gun carriage – used at every state funeral since Queen Victoria in 1901 – was then pulled to Westminster Abbey by 142 junior enlisted sailors in the Royal Navy.
A private burial took place late Monday at the King George VI Memorial Chapel, run by the Dean of Windsor, the royal family’s official website said.
“The Queen was buried alongside the Duke of Edinburgh,” a statement said, adding that her husband, Prince Philip, 73, died last year.
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