鈥楤lack and proud鈥�: Kamala Harris has never shied away from racial identity

Vice President Kamala Harris, left, is greeted by Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis, right, during her arrival at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, onJuly 31, 2024. (AP)
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  • Kamala's mother, who emigrated from India to pursue a doctorate in nutrition and endocrinology, raised her with emphasis on both her India and Black heritage
  • As a child, she was bused to a newly desegregated elementary school in a wealthier white neighborhood and attended a Black church on Sundays

WASHINGTON: Former president Donald Trump, who has a long history of making incendiary comments about race, has stepped up his attacks on his 2024 White House rival Kamala Harris by claiming she 鈥渉appened to turn Black鈥� for political advantage.
But the reality is that the vice president, the product of a mixed race marriage between Jamaican and Indian immigrants, embraced her Blackness long before embarking on a career in public service.

Harris was born in Oakland, California, in 1964, to Afro-Jamaican Donald Harris, who came to the United States to study economics, and Shyamala Gopalan, who emigrated from India at 19 to pursue her doctorate in nutrition and endocrinology.
They met at the University of California, Berkeley, a hub of student activism, while participating in the civil rights movement 鈥� and sometimes even taking a toddler Kamala along to marches.
Donald Harris remains a professor emeritus at Stanford University, while Gopalan, who helped advance breast cancer research, passed away in 2009.
After the couple divorced, Gopalan raised Kamala and her younger sister Maya, instilling pride in their South Asian roots. She took them on trips to India and often expressed affection or frustration in Tamil, Kamala wrote in her 2019 book, 鈥淭he Truths We Hold.鈥�
But Gopalan also understood she was raising two Black daughters.
鈥淪he knew that her adopted homeland would see Maya and me as Black girls, and she was determined to ensure we grew into confident, proud Black women,鈥� Harris wrote.
As a child, Harris was bused to a newly desegregated elementary school in a wealthier white neighborhood and attended a Black church on Sundays.
鈥淚鈥檓 Black, and I鈥檓 proud of being Black, and I was born Black, I will die Black,鈥� Harris told The Breakfast Club radio show in 2019.
But she鈥檚 continued to lean into her Indian heritage too, appearing in a 2019 video where she and actress Mindy Kaling, also of Indian descent, bonded over making dosas.
鈥淪he鈥檚 embraced her Blackness and her Indian heritage as well,鈥� said Kerry Haynie, chair of political science at Duke University, adding that Trump鈥檚 鈥渞ace-baiting鈥� attacks were aimed at galvanizing his own base.

When it came time for college, Harris chose Howard University, a historically Black institution in the US capital, following in the footsteps of her hero Thurgood Marshall, the first Black justice on the US Supreme Court.
She attended protests against apartheid in South Africa and joined the storied Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, founded to support Black women. Today, its 360,000 members include leading figures in politics, the arts, science and more.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a powerful signal of alignment with Black Americans,鈥� said Christopher Clark, a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
After Howard, Harris enrolled at UC Hastings College of the Law, where she was elected president of the Black Law Students Association.
As she progressed through her career 鈥� elected San Francisco district attorney in 2003 and California鈥檚 attorney general in 2010 鈥� she was consistently identified as Black or African American in media reports.
Some went so far as to dub her the 鈥渇emale Obama鈥� after Barack Obama, who was elected the nation鈥檚 first Black president in 2008.
Their biographies have parallels: both are biracial, with Obama鈥檚 father a Kenyan economist and his mother a white American.
Critics questioned the authenticity of his African American experience, and Trump may be using a similar tactic to try to discredit Harris, suggested Clark.
However, being Black in America has always been a 鈥渧ery broad umbrella鈥� due to the legacy of slavery, wrote Teresa Wiltz in a Politico op-ed, encompassing 鈥渕yriad iterations of skin color and hair texture and life experiences.鈥�
The most important Black political figures in US history have often been of mixed race, from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to activist-philosopher Angela Davis, Wiltz noted.
If Harris identifies as Black, 鈥渨e can 鈥� and should 鈥� take her word for it,鈥� she said.