Waking up to the news of Kamala Harris’ election as US vice-president, people in her Indian grandfather’s home town set off firecrackers and offered prayers.
Groups gathered on Sunday at street corners in Thulasendrapuram, a village of 350 people, reading newspapers and chatting about Joe Biden and Harris’ victory before moving to a temple.
A woman wrote in coloured powder outside her home: “Congratulations Kamala Harris. Pride of our village. Vanakkam [Greetings] America.”
Most of them had gone to sleep by the time Biden clinched the winning threshold of 270 electoral college votes, making Harris the first woman and the first person of south Asian descent to be elected vice-president.
“For two or three days we kept our fingers crossed while the result was delayed,” said village resident Kalidas Vamdayar. “Now it’s a joyful moment for us. We are enjoying it.”
“We will celebrate with firecrackers, distributing Indian sweets to people and praying in the temple,” Vamdayar said. “We will request her to come here. She would have heard our voice and she may come.”
Tamil Nadu’s food minister R Kamraj, led about 100 people at the Dharma Sastha temple for a 20-minute prayer during which the idol of Hindu deity Ayyanar, a form of Shiva, was washed with milk and decked with flowers by the priest. He chanted hymns after lighting oil lamps, and the villagers bowed their heads in respect.
“Kamala Harris is the daughter of our village,” said Aulmozhi Sudhakar, a village councillor. “From children to senior citizens, each one of us is awaiting the day she will take the oath as the vice-president of the US.”
There were more singing, dancing and firecrackers throughout the day in the village, where cutouts and posters wishing Harris a “grand success” adorned walls.
People congregated in groups of 30 or 40 exchanging sweets, delicacies and snacks at different spots. They seemed to be celebrating Diwali, the most popular Hindu festival of lights, a week ahead of time. Young children carrying placards with photos of Harris ran around the village.
Several politicians from nearby districts visited the village with their supporters, meeting residents and visiting the temple. Musicians played wind and string instruments with cymbals and drums.
J Sudhakar, who organised prayers on election day, expressed his wish that Harris will visit. As Americans voted, about 50 residents, with folded hands, lined up in the temple that reverberated with the sound of ringing bells, and a Hindu priest gave them sweets and flowers as a religious offering.
Women in the village, which is 215 miles from the southern coastal city of Chennai, used bright colours to write “We Wish Kamala Harris Wins” on the ground, alongside a thumbs-up sign. The lush green village is the home town of Harris’s maternal grandfather, who had moved to Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu state, decades ago.
Inside the temple where people have been holding special prayers, Harris’s name is sculpted into a stone that lists public donations made to the temple in 2014, along with that of her grandfather, who gave money decades ago.
Harris’ late mother also was born in India, before moving to the US at the age of 19 to study at the University of California. She married a Jamaican man, and they named their daughter Kamala, Sanskrit for “lotus flower”.
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