Indians erect banners, pray for Kamala Harris to win US election with Joe Biden

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An art enthusiast paints an image of Kamala Harris on a canvas outside a drawing school in Mumbai on Aug 13, 2020.

Painganadu, India - US vice-presidential hopeful used to visit Tamil Nadu as a child and villagers in Painganadu have shown their backing for her.

By Reuters

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Published: Tue 18 Aug 2020, 10:59 PM

Last updated: Mon 24 Aug 2020, 10:38 AM

Indians in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, which US vice-presidential hopeful Kamala Harris visited as a kid, have erected banners, held special prayers and wished her success.
Villagers in Painganadu, Harris' ancestral village, put up banners of Harris. Harris' mother, who migrated to the United States to study, traces her roots to this non-descript hamlet in eastern Tamil Nadu.
"They (Kamala Harris) have gone to the level of contesting for a vice-presidential candidate in America. Naturally, the villagers are very happy," Ramanan, a trustee at a local temple, told Reuters Television.
Harris, born to an Indian mother and a Jamaican father who both immigrated to the United States to study, made history last week when US Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden picked her as his vice-president.
Ramanan, who goes by only one name, said Harris' maternal grandfather P.V. Gopalan, a former high-ranking Indian government official, donated funds to the temple when he visited.
On annual trips to India as a child, Harris would go for strolls with her maternal grandfather and his friends. In a speech in 2018, Senator Harris recalled those early visits to her grandparents in India.
Further south, in Tamil Nadu's Rameswaram town, priests held special rituals and prayed for Harris' victory.
"Kamala Harris - she is of Indian descent, she should win the election and also should be in favour of India," said Ananthapadmanaba Sharma, a priest at the Ramanathaswamy temple.
"We will do all kinds of worship and the Lord will answer our prayers for her victory," Sharma said.


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