The family settled in a small house loaned to them by
Princess George of Greece and Denmark at
Saint-Cloud, on the outskirts of Paris, where Princess Andrew helped in a charity shop for Greek refugees. She became deeply religious and, in October 1928, converted to the
Greek Orthodox Church. Soon afterward, she began claiming that she was receiving divine messages and that she had healing powers. In 1930, her behaviour became increasingly erratic, and she asserted that she was in communication with the Buddha and Christ. She was diagnosed with
paranoid schizophrenia, first by Thomas Ross, a psychiatrist specialising in the treatment of
shell shock, and subsequently by Sir
Maurice Craig, who had treated the future
King George VI before he had speech therapy. The diagnosis was confirmed at
Ernst Simmel's sanatorium at
Tegel, Berlin. She was forcibly removed from her family and placed in
Ludwig Binswanger's sanatorium in
Kreuzlingen, Switzerland. It was a famous and well-respected institution with several celebrity patients, including
Vaslav Nijinsky, the ballet dancer and choreographer, who was there at the same time as the princess. Binswanger also diagnosed her with schizophrenia. Both he and Simmel sought advice from
Sigmund Freud, who concluded that the delusions derived from sexual frustration and suggested "
X-raying her ovaries in order to kill off her libido." She continued to assert her sanity and made repeated efforts to leave the sanatorium. Princess Andrew remained at Kreuzlingen for two years, but after a brief stay at a clinic in
Merano in northern Italy, was released and began an itinerant, incognito existence in Central Europe. She maintained contact with her mother but broke off ties to the rest of her family until the end of 1936. In 1937, her daughter Cecilie, her son-in-law
Georg, and two of her grandchildren were killed in an
air accident at Ostend; she and Prince Andrew met for the first time in six years at the funeral. (Prince Philip and Lord Louis Mountbatten also attended.) She resumed contact with her family, and in 1938 returned to Athens alone to work with the poor, while living in a two-bedroom flat near the
Benaki Museum. ==World War II==