King Charles III and Queen Camilla.Photo:Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

King Charles III and Queen Camilla can be seen on the Buckingham Palace balcony ahead of the flypast during the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla on May 06, 2023

Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

FormerBBC journalist Laura Trevelyan, who quit her job to join the Caribbean’s fight for reparatory justice, wantsKing Charlesto apologize for the royal family’s historic involvement in the slave trade.

Trevelyan, 55, spearheads a group of British families who want to make reparations for their ancestors' participation in the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. In February 2023, Trevelyan gave $127,000 of her pension savings to the government in Grenada (which will be used to help fund education initiatives) after she learned her family once owned 1,000 slaves in the Caribbean nation.

And she would like Charles, 74, whohas supported an investigation into the royal family’s ties to slavery, to follow suit.

“I would hope very much that in the coming years, he can apologize for the royal family’s historic links to slavery and make a meaningful financial gesture that would be seen as reparative,” Trevelyan tells PEOPLE. “But what that figure is, I have no idea.”

During a visit to the Bahamas in 2021, Charles expressed his anguish over the crimes of the past, referring to the “appalling atrocity of slavery, which forever stains our history.” And during a trip to Kigali, Rwanda,last year, he saidin a speech, “I cannot describe the depths of my personal sorrow at the suffering of so many, as I continue to deepen my own understanding of slavery’s enduring impact. Many of those wrongs belong to an earlier age with different – and, in some ways lesser – values. By working together, we are building a new and enduring friendship.”

Laura Trevalyan.Bill Wadman

Laura Trevalyan Simon Perry interview. Sir John Trevelyan enslaver ancestor reparations

Bill Wadman

Charles' son and heirPrince Williamhas done the same,speaking in Jamaicawhen he and his wifeKate Middletonwere on a tour of the Caribbean in March 2022.

“I want to express my profound sorrow. Slavery was abhorrent. And it should never have happened.” he said.

Echoing Charles' speech last year, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson tells PEOPLE, “This is an issue that His Majesty takes profoundly seriously. As His Majesty told the Commonwealth Heads of Government Reception in Rwanda last year: “I cannot describe the depths of my personal sorrow at the suffering of so many, as I continue to deepen my own understanding of slavery’s enduring impact.”

Catherine Duchess of Cambridge and Prime Minister of Jamaica Andrew Holness (R) listen as Prince William, Duke of Cambridge speaks during a dinner hosted by the Governor General of Jamaica at King’s House on March 23, 2022 in Kingston, Jamaica. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are visiting Belize, Jamaica and The Bahamas on behalf of Her Majesty The Queen on the occasion of the Platinum Jubilee. The 8 day tour takes place between Saturday 19th March and Saturday 26th March and is their first joint official overseas tour since the onset of COVID-19 in 2020.

Laura Trevelyan talking to Prime Minister of Grenada Dickon Mitchell.Reynaldo Bernard

Laura Trevalyan Simon Perry interview. Sir John Trevelyan enslaver ancestor reparations

Reynaldo Bernard

Britain was a prominent enslaver and many aristocratic families made their fortunes in the slave trade and the industries that used slaves. For Trevelyan, her family’s historical links to slavery were unknown to her and her relatives until around 2016 after the University College Londonpublished a list of familieswho received compensation for being slave owners. (She points out that any fortune has not materialized in the more recent generations who have all worked in professions without vast inherited wealth.)

For the royals, it is a complicated issue. While Charles, who will travel toKenya later this week for an official state touralongside Queen Camilla, supports the inquiry into the royal family’s involvement in the slave trade, as a constitutional monarch, he has to act on the advice of the government. Thus, whatever his personal thinking about the wrongs of the past may be, he cannot offer an official apology without sanction from politicians who would be tied to what would possibly follow — such as demands for significant reparations.

While Charles has expressed “regret without saying sorry,” Trevelyan says, “presumably there’s a memo somewhere in Whitehall which says you can’t apologize because if you do, that opens you up for liability.”

Laura Trevelyan in Brooklyn, NYC.Bill Wadman

Laura Trevalyan Simon Perry interview. Sir John Trevelyan enslaver ancestor reparations

Trevelyan, who was a political correspondent during her long and successful career at the BBC, says, “[The King’s] clearly doing as much as he possibly can and as a constitutional monarch who can’t step ahead of the position of the government. But he is also Supreme Governor of the Church of England. And the church has apologized for its historic links to slavery and set up a hundred million pound fund.”

“Moreover he’s the head of the Commonwealth. There would be a great healing power to an apology for slavery and some kind of reparative justice strategy from the King. So I wait with interest to see what he’s going to do.”

Laura Trevelyan, with members of her family, makes a public apology in Grenada in February.Reynaldo Bernard

Laura Trevalyan Simon Perry interview. Sir John Trevelyan enslaver ancestor reparations

The organizations of Caribbean nations, called Caricom, has estimated that Britain and fellow slave trading nations France, Spain and Denmark, shouldpay $33 trillion in reparations.The organization has a 10-point plan that maps out what countries should do to make amends for the horrors of the past.

The Dutchgovernment has apologizedfor its historic role in slavery and, in June, the country’sKing Willem-Alexanderfollowed suit.

“So, it’s possible to do,” Trevelyan says from her home in Brooklyn, N.Y.C. “And it is not just possible, but it’s important to do. And the sky hasn’t fallen in, in the Netherlands. That means it could happen in Britain.”

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The then Prince Charles and his wife Camilla in Rwanda in June 2022.SIMON WOHLFAHRT/AFP via Getty

Britain’s Prince Charles (C), Prince of Wales, and Britain’s Camilla (3rd-L), Duchess of Cornwall pose for a photo with a group of Genocide survivors during a visit of the Kigali Genocide Memorial, Kigali, Rwanda on June 22, 2022 during a visit. - Britain’s Prince Charles will take part in the 26th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting held in Kigali, Rwanda from the 20 june until the 25 June 2022.

“Clearly the royal family’s wealth today is to some extent, based on its involvement in slavery. We don’t know to what extent. We can only guess,” Trevelyan says.

The then Prince Charles and Camilla in Kigali, Rwanda in June 2022.SIMON WOHLFAHRT/AFP via Getty

Britain’s Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, and Britain’s Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall pause in front of a flower wreath at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, Kigali, Rwanda on June 22, 2022 during a visit. - Britain’s Prince Charles will take part in the 26th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting held in Kigali, Rwanda from the 20 june until the 25 June 2022.

It should start with the government, she continues.

source: people.com