Kamala Harris recollects her frequent visits to India
Vice President Kamala Harris, who is the Democratic presidential candidate, in an op-ed on Saturday, recollected her frequent visits to India as a child, and her mother's mission to cure cancer.
"Growing up, my mother raised my sister and me to appreciate and honour our heritage. Nearly every other year, we would go to India for Diwali. We would spend time with our grandparents, our uncles, and our chitthis," Harris said in the op-ed for The Jaggernaut, an online South Asian publication.
"And as Vice President, it has been my honour to host Diwali celebrations in my home — the Vice President's Residence. Not only to celebrate the holiday, but to celebrate the rich history, culture, and heritage of the South Asian American diaspora, which is bound together by a shared sense of possibility and belief in the promise of America," she said.
In her op-ed published three days before the November 5 general elections, Harris wrote that as a 19-year-old, her mother Shyamala Harris crossed the world alone, travelling from India to the United States. "My mother had two goals in her life: to raise her two daughters, my sister Maya and me, and to cure breast cancer," she wrote.
"When I was little, when we travelled to India, we would also visit my grandfather, PV Gopalan, in what was then called Madras. My grandfather was a retired civil servant. His morning routine consisted of taking long walks on the beach with his retired buddies. I would join him on those walks and listen to stories about the importance of fighting for democracy and civil rights," she wrote.
"Throughout these walks, I recall my grandfather teaching me lessons about not just what it means to have a democracy but to keep a democracy. Those lessons first inspired my interest in public service. And they continue to guide me today — as Vice President and as a candidate for President of the United States," Harris said.
She said she believes Americans want a president who works for all the American people. "And that has been the story of my entire career," he said.