Times Colonist

Democrats’ VP hopeful has a multifaith life

Kamala Harris went to a Baptist church and Hindu temple; her husband is Jewish

- ELANA SCHOR

Kamala Harris, tapped on Tuesday as Joe Biden’s running mate, attended services at both a Black Baptist church and a Hindu temple growing up — an interfaith background that reflects her historic status as the first Black woman and woman of South Asian descent on a major-party presidenti­al ticket.

The 55-year-old first-term Democratic senator, whose name means “lotus” in the Sanskrit language, identifies as a Baptist as an adult and brought another faith into her life in 2014 when she married Douglas Emhoff, a Jewish lawyer. Their wedding featured the breaking of a glass, a Jewish tradition, and Harris’s stepchildr­en gave her the nickname of “Momala,” a rhyme with her name that recalls the Yiddish term “mamaleh.”

During a 2017 speech at a historic Black church in Atlanta, Harris invoked both of the faiths she encountere­d as the daughter of immigrants from Jamaica and India.

Attending the 23rd Avenue Church of God in Oakland, California as a child, Harris said, “we’d learn about caring for the least of these. And I sang in the choir about how faith combined with determinat­ion will always see us through difficult times.”

Harris added that her mother also took her and her sister to a Hindu temple “to see that all faiths teach us to pursue justice.”

She also used that speech to portray her approach to high-profile prosecutor­ial positions, first as San Francisco district attorney and later as California’s attorney general, as rooted in the biblical “concept of redemption.”

“We will all make a mistake, and for some that mistake will rise to the level of being a crime,” Harris said. “But is it not the sign of a just society that we allow folks a way to earn their way back? That is the concept of redemption.”

Harris attends services at the Third Baptist Church of San Francisco, led by pastor Rev. Amos Brown, who lauded her as “a quintessen­tial scholar” who would unite “the spirituali­ty, the genius and the nonviolent traditions” of her parents’ background­s and of the African American community.

“She’s a spiritual person,” Brown said of Harris.

While she has not spoken about her faith as frequently as Biden, Harris at times invoked biblical values during her Democratic presidenti­al primary bid, which ended last year.

During a forum hosted by the

Poor People’s Campaign, a national effort to combat poverty, Harris pointed to the parable of the Good Samaritan as a guidepost.

That biblical parable is “about defining who is neighbour,” Harris said, as not someone “who shares your zip code” or “drives the same kind of car,” but about connecting with the needy and those seeking refuge and “understand­ing that we are all each other’s brothers and sisters.”

Religious groups that weighed in on Harris’s selection largely split along ideologica­l lines. The Jewish Democratic Council of America hailed her selection; the Republican Jewish Coalition decried it.

Harris’s support for abortion rights also sparked criticism from Priests for Life, an anti-abortion group led by a Catholic priest and longtime backer of U.S. President Donald Trump.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER ?? Kamala Harris: Parable of the Good Samaritan as a guidepost.
CAROLYN KASTER Kamala Harris: Parable of the Good Samaritan as a guidepost.

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