Your mother was in the US whereas I was growing up in a very small country town in Australia. It didn't rate a mention amongst school kids of my age or even older.
Yesterday I was talking to a number of much older people - people now in the 70s and 80s and most of them only have a vague memory of it as the TV coverage here wasn't all that great across the country. A lot of the country simply didn't have any TV until the late 60s and even these people who were in their 20s and 30s didn't take much notice of Kennedy's assassination as it was half a world away and had no bearing on their lives here at that time. None could recall what they were doing when they heard but most assumed they were getting breakfast or simply getting up when they turned on the radio although some said that it would have been later in the day, after they had dropped the kids at school or arrived at work. My brother who was 10 at the time also told me that he had no memory of the event at all and has no memory of anyone talking about it or anything like that. His teachers didn't mention it.
Almost universal TV coverage certainly makes it easier to remember these
I was agreeing with your point..that. It seemed my mom remembered because of the fact that it happened in US... but i ment to impley that people would remember Diana, even poeple from other countries.. I guess my point was that I think alot to people more so (in UK) will remember Diana..becuase of the media coverage and the simple fact that she is a part of the HISTORY now. Im 34 and I remember her wedding like I remember my husband waking me up telling me she was dead...
Like all people who die Im sure there will come a time when people dont remember Diana, the walking, talking,first person to publicly touch an aids suffer in a time that it was not the status quo..but the newspapers,stories,pictures and the fact that she is the mother of a futrue King will last forever IMO