'Harry & Meghan', the documentary that addresses the love story of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and their decision to leave the British Royal House, has already been released on Netflix.
In the first chapters, directed by Liz Garbus, the couple narrates in first person various moments of their life together, but they also discuss episodes from their past, especially Prince Harry, who speaks openly about the controversial covers he starred in as a teenager and youth.
During those years, it was common for the youngest son of Lady Di and King Charles III of England to monopolize all the paparazzi flashes for his nights out, but an image of those nights of partying in London became especially viral and was a sc--dal. for the British royal family: in it, young Harry, who was going to turn 21, could be seen at a costume party wearing a military uniform and a red armband with the swastika, one of the most recognized Nazi symbols.
Prince William's brother has been self-critical, stating that that was one of the biggest mistakes of his life and that he felt very ashamed afterwards, and has publicly apologized again, as he did when that photograph came to light in 2005. At that time he released a statement in which he admitted his mistake: "I'm very sorry if I surprised or made anyone feel uncomfortable. It was a bad wardrobe choice and I apologize for that."
At that time, the British newspaper 'The Post' published that his father, the current monarch and in those days heir to the crown, asked him to examine his conscience for the mistake he had made by dressing as a soldier in Adolf Hitler's army. Thus, he made him watch works that narrated what happened in the Second World War, such as 'Schindler's List', and imposed a trip to one of the Nazi concentration and extermination camps, Auschwitz in Poland, so that he could learn about the horror of what was experienced there.
Now, Prince Harry has revealed in his documentary series that he also had a talk with a London rabbi and that he met with a Holocaust survivor in Berlin, ensuring that those two meetings had "a great impact" on him: "There could have been ignored and probably made the same mistakes over and over again in my life, but I learned from it.

