The Telegram (St. John's)

Harris has a Canadian connection

- FREDERIC TOMESCO

Could a former Montrealer be on her way to the White House?

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden has selected California Senator Kamala Harris as his choice for U.S. vice-president in the Nov. 3 election. Harris, 55, is a former San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general.

The news did not go unnoticed in Montreal, where Harris spent a chunk of her early life. Mayor Valérie Plante offered her congratula­tions in a tweet, underlinin­g Harris’s status as the first Black woman in U.S. history to be on a major party presidenti­al ticket.

Born in Oakland, Calif., Harris moved here with her sister and mother at age 12, graduating from Westmount High School in 1981 before returning to the U.S. Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a breast cancer specialist, had moved to Montreal to perform research work at the Jewish General Hospital and teach at Mcgill University.

“I’m very proud of Kamala,” former classmate Hugh Kwok said. “She was a special person, kind and thoughtful, always very interested in helping everyone.”

Harris’s 336-page memoir, The Truths We Hold: An American Journey, doesn’t shed much light on her Montreal years — devoting only two pages to that period of her life.

Upon arriving in Montreal, Harris and younger sister Maya attended the Notre-dame-des-neiges school on Côte-des-neiges Rd. because their mother wanted them to learn French. The only French words the 12-yearold Harris knew when she first arrived came from her ballet class, the San Jose Mercury News reported in a May 2019 story.

As Harris wrote in her book: “I used to joke that I felt like a duck, because all day long at our new school I’d be saying, ‘Quoi? Quoi? Quoi?’”

Some observers, such as former Canadian diplomat and newspaper columnist Norman Spector, wonder what Harris really made of the experience.

“What we need to know now is what memories — good and/or bad — Kamala Harris harbours of Montréal, Québec and Canada having lived among us and having attended Westmount High School,” Spector wrote on Twitter.

Kwok, who runs the Wingho Auto Classique dealership in Montreal, recalls Harris being a “very popular student” in high school.

“She was very involved in the student associatio­n and many different clubs. She was very active.”

Kwok says Harris and himself were part of a group of 10 Westmount High students from the Class of 1981 who went on to study at U.S. universiti­es after graduating.

While Harris attended Washington, D.C.’S Howard University, majoring in both political science and economics, Kwok went to the University of Michigan on a tennis scholarshi­p.

Though injuries prevented him from making it as a profession­al athlete, he says he never forgot the moral support his American friend provided.

“Kamala would see me carrying all my bags and she’d always have a supportive word for me,” he recalled. “She’d say: ‘Go for it, Hugh!” That’s her character. She always encouraged me to stick with my dreams. It’s unfortunat­e that we didn’t keep in touch. I don’t follow politics, but you can bet I’ll be watching Nov. 3.”

 ??  ?? U.S. Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden has chosen U.S. Senator Kamala Harris as his vice-presidenti­al running mate. Harris spent several years in Montreal and graduated from high school there.
U.S. Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden has chosen U.S. Senator Kamala Harris as his vice-presidenti­al running mate. Harris spent several years in Montreal and graduated from high school there.

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