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AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill
MULTIRACIAL IDENTITY. The daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian
mother, both of whom immigrated to the U.S. during the Civil Rights
Movement, Vice President Kamala Harris’s historic presidential bid has
again put a spotlight on American identity politics and the growing
number of people who say they are multiracial. Pictured is VP Harris
speaking during the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.’s Grand Boulé last
month in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)
From The Asian Reporter, V34, #8 (August 5, 2024), pages 8 &
11.
Kamala Harris has America focused on multiracial
identity
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill
An election year that was already bitterly partisan has been
completely upended by President Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the
2024 White House race and endorse Vice President Kamala Harris. But it’s
not just Harris’s late entry that has electrified things. It’s also the
history to be made if the likely Democratic nominee becomes the first
female president who is also multiracial.
The daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, both of whom
immigrated to the U.S. during the Civil Rights Movement, Harris’s
historic presidential bid has again put a spotlight on American identity
politics and the growing number of people who say they are multiracial.
Different countries divide people into categories depending on
different national traditions. The U.S., with its slavery-molded
history, divides people into Black or white, and nine million people
identified as multiracial in 2010.
When Harris ran for vice president in 2020, 33.8 million people in
the U.S. identified as being more than one race, according to the
census.
Is Kamala Harris a Black woman?
Yes, she is. Her father Donald Jasper Harris, professor emeritus of
economics at Stanford University, is a naturalized U.S. citizen born in
Jamaica.
Harris has said her mother deliberately raised her and her sister as
Black because she felt that was how the world would see them first.
Harris chose to go to Howard University, a historically Black college
and university in Washington, D.C. The vice president maintains close
ties to her alma mater and to her sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority,
Incorporated.
Being multiracial often means people try to categorize you and then
treat you accordingly, said Dr. Kalya Castillo, a licensed psychologist
in New York whose clinical interests include multiracial identity. She
has met with patients who come for therapy for one issue and end up
talking about being biracial or multiracial.
"What are the messages that you’ve received from your family along
with the outside community and society?" said Castillo, who is Black and
Japanese. "I have more people who are curious about exploring that now."
Every multiracial person’s experience and how they choose to present
themselves is different. There’s also no predicting if someone decides
to stereotype you. Castillo said many people assume she is a member of a
"model minority" group because of her Japanese heritage.
Growing up, however, her Asian mother was afraid how Castillo would
be treated if people saw her as Black.
"She knew a bit about the discrimination that African-Americans,
Blacks, have faced in America," Castillo said.
Is Kamala Harris also an Indian American woman?
Yes, she is. Her late mother Shyamala Gopalan, a biomedical scientist
at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, was born in India.
In 2020, there was criticism that Harris’ Indian heritage wasn’t
given much media attention. Some wonder if that’s happening again.
"What I’ve already seen just in the last 24 hours is folks who are
advocates for the South Asian community arguing or complaining that her
Asian-ness is getting erased," said Stephen Caliendo, co-founder and
co-director of The Project on Race in Political Communication at North
Central College.
"She’s often referred to as a Black woman candidate," he said.
From the playground to the workplace, being multiracial can be
fraught with challenges. In politics, it can spark attacks rooted in
race instead of policy disagreements.
The day after Harris replaced Biden at the top of the Democratic
presidential ticket, Tennessee Republican representative Tim Burchett
called her a "DEI hire" in a TV interview. Conservatives have been using
diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives to argue that unqualified
people get hired solely based on their race and gender.
But, GOP leaders are now urging Republicans to lay off racist and
sexist attacks for fear of alienating voters.
Andra Gillespie, a political science professor at Emory University
who has written extensively about Black politicians and political
mobilization and race, says both racist and sexist tropes were
inevitable for Harris. GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance said at a
rally that Harris has been only "collecting a government paycheck for
the last 20 years."
"Kamala Harris got something that was especially tailored to
stereotypes about Black women," Gillespie said.
Even seemingly innocuous words from Harris sparked what seemed like
racist arguments, Caliendo said. In her first statement after Biden’s
withdrawal, Harris announced "my intention is to earn and win this
nomination." Very quickly, some Republican officials quipped that she
hadn’t earned anything.
"It plays into a stereotype of undeserving members of minority
groups, particularly women, ‘welfare queen’ kind of thing," Caliendo
said. "She feels entitled to something that she hasn’t earned. She’s
using it as an inoculation against what she expects."
Conservatives have also butchered Harris’ first name, igniting
accusations of racism and disrespect. Kamala (KAH’-mah-lah) means lotus
in Sanskrit. In his first rally since Harris became the likely
Democratic nominee, Republican Donald Trump repeatedly mispronounced her
name as part of a broad attack on someone he called his "new victim to
defeat." And at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee in July,
several speakers mispronounced the vice president’s name.
Supporters say these mispronunciations are meant to stress her
multiracial background as something scary.
"I think we should all expect more, from all corners of American
civic life. But certainly we should expect more from the halls of
congress," said Chintan Patel, director of the political empowerment
organization Indian American Impact.
Do some people think the vice president
isn’t Black or South Asian enough?
When Harris announced her presidential candidacy for the first time
in 2019, it didn’t take long for people in the Black community to
question if she was "Black enough." Some cited the fact she is Jamaican,
not African American. Others pointed to her marriage to Doug Emhoff, who
is white. Candidate Harris decided to address these accusations head-on
by going on all-Black-hosted radio shows like "The Breakfast Club."
"I’m Black, and I’m proud of being Black," Harris, then a U.S.
senator, said in the 2019 radio interview. "I was born Black. I will die
Black, and I’m not going to make excuses for anybody because they don’t
understand."
Gillespie called such a criticism a tired trope, saying Harris has
always rightfully been a part of the Black community and the Black
experience. Gillespie also pointed to the two Zoom calls held in July by
Black women and Black men, respectively, that raised nearly $3 million.
"The idea that you could get tens of thousands of Black people on a
call that was organized at the last minute to talk about how are we
going to support this presidential candidate, I think speaks volumes to
how Black grassroots activists are going to organize in support of her
and how they’re organizing and embracing her as a member of their
community," Gillespie said.
Patel also hit back at any notion that Harris is not "Indian enough."
He praised her for supporting Indian American Impact when it launched in
2018.
"She has keynoted at many community events that we’ve had across the
years, across the country. She’s hosted Diwali event celebrations, Eid
celebrations at her home," Patel said. "She’s really showed up and
championed South Asian American communities."
Why do racial labels continue to matter in American politics?
The idea that someone gets to be the authority on someone else’s
racial identity is reminiscent of the "one-drop rule." A legal principle
rooted in slavery, the so-called rule determined anyone with even a drop
of Black lineage could not own land or be free. To come up with criteria
to validate a multiracial person is pointless and hurtful, Castillo
said.
"Your legitimacy is questioned. It’s like this superficial, arbitrary
stuff that’s like super performative," Castillo said.
What Castillo has found helpful is the "Bill of Rights for Racially
Mixed People," a list published by Maria Root, a renowned clinical
psychologist who is also biracial, in 1993. The list contains a dozen
declarations such as "I have the right not to justify my ethnic
legitimacy." Castillo showed it to her daughter after the girl’s friends
argued "what percentage Asian she was versus Black."
"It’s also been super-empowering for me," Castillo said. "It’s
something that I still am trying to practice and really be thoughtful
about when I’m in situations in which I think people are trying to tell
me who I am."
Terry Tang reports on race and ethnicity issues, including Asian
American and Pacific Islander communities, for The Associated Press.
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