THULASENDRAPURAM, India — At a small temple in southern India, a group of people has been praying every day since late last month: “May Kamala Harris win this election. May she visit this temple and do good for our village.”
The community of 2,000 people, surrounded by rice fields, is the ancestral village of Kamala Harris, where her maternal grandfather P.V. Gopalan lived some 100 years ago. His daughter, Harris’ mother Shyamala Gopalan, emigrated from India to the United States, where she met and married Donald Harris, a fellow graduate student who’d come to study from Jamaica.
Some news reports say Harris, who was born and raised in California, visited Thulasendrapuram as a young child, but residents can’t confirm she’s ever been. Harris has often reflected on the importance of her childhood visits with her maternal grandfather in Chennai, but doesn’t mention his village in her memoir, The Truths We Hold.
Even so, when President Biden dropped out of the U.S. presidential race last month, Thulasendrapuram politician Arulmozhi Sudhakar and her husband started organizing prayers for Harris at the local temple, with daily offerings of milk and coconuts to the deity.
The ritual attracted local and international attention. Two days after Harris emerged as the Democratic frontrunner, Arulmozhi was scheduled to give half a dozen interviews to journalists visiting her village. She turned up in a silk sari and sandalwood perfume and took the day off from her duties as an elected member of the town council.
“I can relate to [Harris’] struggles as a woman politician,” . What she said she admires most is Harris’ ability “to smile while facing all the political challenges.”
Four years ago, when Biden and Harris were elected, residents of Thulasendrapuram celebrated with music and firecrackers. Children carried placards with Harris’ face and women drew pictures with colorful rangoli powder.