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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

12,870km away, women connect with Kamala

‘America lady’ inspires other daughters of ancestral village

Reuters Chennai Published 05.11.20, 01:19 AM
Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris File picture

More than 12,870km from Washington, Indian women have been rooting for the “America lady” in the village of US vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s grandfather in Tamil Nadu.

As locals in Thulasendrapuram’s temple held special prayers for a Democratic win in the November 3 election, 34-year-old M. Umadevi — who was elected to the village council in December — said she related to Harris as a fellow woman politician.

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“She is a daughter of our village,” said Umadevi, who has a five-year-old son and sews clothes to support the income of her husband, a driver.

“This must have been difficult and challenging for her. But anything new is like that. I feel both excited and nervous about my new role also.”

The village, located about 320km south of Chennai, is where Harris’s maternal grandfather was born more than a century ago.

Harris was born in California to an Indian mother and a Jamaican father who both immigrated to the US to study. She visited Thulasendrapuram when she was five and has talked about walking on Chennai beaches with her grandfather.

The former attorney-general of California, 55-year-old Harris is the first black woman and first person of Indian descent nominated for national office in the US by a major party — and only the fourth woman on a presidential ticket.

Umadevi said her priority as a member of the village council, representing some 200 mostly farming families, was to build a tarmac road.

“The first thing on my list is to make sure we have a proper road,” she told Reuters in a phone interview. “It is in terrible shape and you can barely call it a road really. A good road will bring better fortune.”

Unlike Harris, who has a degree in law, Umadevi dropped out of school when she was 15 on her mother’s decision.

In Thiruvarur district, where Thulasendrapuram is located, literacy level is more than 82 per cent, with district education officials stating that all girls were enrolled in schools.

Umadevi said education was key if the next generation of girls in the village were to become high achievers like Harris, whose smiling image is plastered on banners in the village wishing her electoral success.

“Today, all our girls study, even if it means going to high school that is a few kilometres away from the village,” said Umadevi.

“College is also far but many still go and get a degree,” she said, adding that young people in the area still found it hard to get well-paid jobs.

At the government higher secondary school in neighbouring Painganadu village, English teacher S. Tamilselvan has been following Harris’s campaign speeches and plans to use them to motivate his students.

“She is so articulate and clear,” he said.

“My students know about her but I want at least some of them to succeed like her. Most of my students are first generation learners and even the brightest find it difficult to articulate their ambitions.” Reuters

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