HomeNewsTrendsFeatures5 takeaways from a biography on US Vice-President Kamala Devi Harris

5 takeaways from a biography on US Vice-President Kamala Devi Harris

In politics, where women and men are often judged by different standards, Kamala Harris has tried to champion women’s leadership across party lines.

March 19, 2022 / 18:11 IST
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Kamala Harris talking on the phone. (Photo: Lawrence Jackson via Wikimedia Commons)
Kamala Harris talking on the phone. (Photo: Lawrence Jackson via Wikimedia Commons)

Journalist Chidanand Rajghatta, who wrote The Horse That Flew: How India’s Silicon Gurus Spread Their Wings (2001) and Illiberal India: Gauri Lankesh and the Age of Unreason (2018) has a new book out. Titled Kamala Harris: Phenomenal Woman (HarperCollins, 2021), it is an impressive volume about a woman of colour’s rise to the top in white-supremacist America. We bring you five major takeaways from Harris' eventful life.

1. Embrace your heritage.

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Rajghatta writes, Harris is “unapologetically Black.” She takes pride in the art, culture and history that she inherited from her Jamaican father and other Black elders. This book documents her love of music and dancing, of stars like Nina Simone and Aretha Franklin.

Do you remember the time when Harris tweeted, “When you attend an HBCU, there’s nothing you can’t do”? She was celebrating her education at Howard University in Washington DC. It falls under the umbrella of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). Rajghatta calls Howard “the seat of Black academic pride”. It includes Thurgood Marshall, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, and Walter Washington among its alumni.