I stand before you as first candidate for US vice-president of South Asian descent: Kamala Harris

4
477

Washington, Aug 16 (PTI) Democratic vice-presidential nominee Senator Kamala Harris, during her maiden address to the Indian-American community, reflected on her proud Indian heritage and recalled how her mother always wanted to instill in her a “love for good idli”.

Harris, 55, who is the first black to be selected as a vice-presidential candidate of a major party, took a trip down the memory lane, mentioning her “long walks” in Madras (now Chennai) with her grandfather who would tell her about the “heroes” responsible for the birth of the world’s largest democracy.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, 77, scripted history by selecting Harris, an Indian-American and an African-American, as his running mate in the presidential election on November 3.

Born to a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, California senator Harris, if elected, would be second in line of succession after Biden.

“Today on August 15, 2020. I stand before you as the first candidate for vice president of the United States of South Asian descent,” Harris said in her address organised by Indians for Biden National Council.

Joined by Biden, she greeted Indian Americans on the occasion of India’s Independence Day.

“To the people of India and to Indian Americans all across the US, I want to wish you a happy Indian Independence Day. On August 15, 1947, men and women all over India rejoiced in the declaration of the independence of the country of India,” Harris said during the virtual inaugural meet of the council.

Harris was born on October 20 in 1964, at Oakland in California. Her mother Shyamala Gopalan migrated to the US from Tamil Nadu in India, while her father, Donald J Harris, moved to the US from Jamaica.

“When my mother, Shyamala stepped off the plane in California as 19 years old, she didn’t have much in the way of belongings. But she carried with her lessons from back home, including ones she learned from her parents, my grandmother Rajan, and her father, my grandfather P V Gopalan. They taught her that when you see injustice in the world, you have an obligation to do something about it,” Harris said.

“Which is what inspired my mother to march and shout on the streets of Oakland, at the height of the civil rights movement, a movement where leaders including Dr Martin Luther King Jr, were themselves inspired by the non-violent activism of Mahatma Gandhi,” she said.

Harris said it was during those protests that her mother met her father. The rest, as they say, is history, she said.

“Growing up, my mother would take my sister Maya and me back to what was then called Madras because she wanted us to understand where she had come from and where we had ancestry. And of course, she always wanted to instill in us, a love of good idli,” Harris said.

“In Madras I would go on long walks with my grandfather, who at that point was retired. We would take morning walks where I’d hold his hand and he would tell me about the heroes who are responsible for the birth of the world’s biggest democracy. He would explain that it’s on us to pick up where they left off. Those lessons are a big reason why I am who I am today, Harris said explaining the deep influence of the Indian heritage on her.

“Our community is bound together by so much more than our shared history and culture,” she said.

The reason there is a kinship between everyone who are a product of the South Asian diaspora, no matter how diverse our backgrounds may be, “is because we also share a set of values: values forged by overcoming colonial past, not only in one nation but in two , Harris said.

“Values like tolerance pluralism, and diversity and reflecting on the past 73 years it’s remarkable how much progress, people have made in the fight for justice. And should be proud. But we wouldn’t be if we didn’t commit ourselves to building an even better future. So, I hope you celebrate today, and then tomorrow, I hope you join me in getting to work, she said.

(Lalit Jha-Press Trust of India)got-a-story-2

 



Readers like you, make ESHADOOT work possible. We need your support to deliver quality and positive news about India and Indian diaspora - and to keep it open for everyone. Your support is essential to continue our efforts. Every contribution, however big or small, is so valuable for our future.

Click on below ‘Donate’ button to pay with PAYPAL Donation.


4 COMMENTS

  1. It is all good politicking however in terms of Democratic Party’s allegiance can be easily compared with that of UK’s Labour who are more and more anti Indian and anti-Semitic. This is another pathetic attempt to give Indian origin Americans a chance purely on voter intention basis rather than their personal achievements

  2. Still suspect – she talks about south asian diaspora not Indian though Indians I heard invited her….she mentions two nations so Pakistan ? ????

  3. TOTAL LIE

    KAMLA ALWAYS INSISTED SHE WAS A BLACK AFRICAN AMERICAN- NEVER ASIAN

    SHE IS PRO JIHAD AND ANTI HINDU

    STOP SHAMING YOURSELF BY PUSHING THE ENVLEOPE FOR A ANTI MODI ANTI INDIA
    LEFT RADICAL

    YOU WILL REGRET SOON ENOUGH AND STAND EMBARASSED

    ALSWQAYS REMEBER VEDIC DICTUM- STAYMA VADA

    TELL ONLY TRUTH

    SHE ISN’T ASIAN BY ANY STRETCH AND NEVER CLAIMED HERSELF AS ASIAN BUT AFRICAN

    SHE WAS BORN TO A JAMICAN AND INDIAN HINDU

    BUT DISOWNED HINDUISM AND CONVERTED TO METHODIST CHURCH

    SHE DISOWNED HER INDIAN ROOTS TRUE

    HAVE SOME SHAME WHEN U PUSH A LIE LIKE THIS

  4. Good afternoon,
    I just want to make a point that Kamala Harris is not ‘black’ as such… it would be more accurate to say that she is non white. I believe she is of mixed ethnicity – Indian and Jamaican.

LEAVE A REPLY