The Guardian (USA)

'Immense sense of pride': Caribbean diaspora celebrates Kamala Harris

- Kenya Evelyn from Washington

As she watched America’s inaugurati­on ceremony last week, Aziza Jones switched back and forth between her social media and her television, hoping the extra energy use didn’t generate a power outage – a setback she said can be common in St Croix, US Virgin Islands.

From her home, the non-profit worker thought of her parents as she witnessed Kamala Harris – the daughter of immigrants from Jamaica and India - become the United States’ first vicepresid­ent of Caribbean descent.

“Everyone was excited to have another Caribbean woman fighting for us,” she said, pinpointin­g the Virgin Islands congresswo­man Stacey Plaskett as the other. “My parents would have wanted to vote for her so it was like making their dream come true.”

As residents of the Caribbean territory, Jones’s parents are among the more than 100,000 Virgin Islanders who even as American citizens, are ineligible to vote in the general election. She said casting her absentee ballot as a resident of Illinois felt like giving them a voice.

In cities such as New York, Miami and Boston, the historic milestone saw many Caribbean Americans spend their inaugurati­on day honoring Harris in family group and WhatsApps chats – similar to many Indian American celebratio­ns shared on what is sometimes called Desi Twitter.

For a diaspora representi­ng a region of 45 million Caribbean people, including countries such as Jamaica, Haiti, Cuba and Guyana, the buzz signified that an American voting bloc some have considered overlooked was finally getting due recognitio­n.

“There was an immense sense of pride from all over,” said Shurland Oliver, executive director of Vote Caribbean, a Washington DC-based voter advocacy group. “Caribbean Americans saw [Harris] as one of our own – a symbol of the excellence we can achieve.”

According to Migration Policy Institute, the Caribbean diaspora in the US consists of more than 8 million people who were either born in the region or reported having ancestry of a given Caribbean country, including an estimated 4.4 million immigrants.

More than 90% come from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

That growing diaspora of Caribbean American voters was a bloc Joe Biden’s

campaign sought to engage, primarily in battlegrou­nd states like Florida and Georgia where their population growth has worked to strengthen Black voter turnout.

In Georgia, Caribbean voters in the state’s Senate runoff helped steer turnout to records numbers, securing victories for the newly sworn-in Democratic senators Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff.

“It’s about that exposure,” Oliver said. “We’re mistakenly lumped into the same groups as African Americans when politician­s have needed to engage with our communitie­s in ways that speak to our unique cultures.

“With [Kamala Harris], they were able to,” he said.

Vote Caribbean led get-out-thevote efforts throughout communitie­s in urban, Democratic stronghold­s, including with Virgin Islanders in Georgia, Haitian Americans in south Florida, and Jamaican Americans in Pennsylvan­ia.

Harris has thanked these groups for their support, noting the diaspora “did the work” helping Democrats win in November. The White House has since announced several administra­tion hires of Caribbean American descent.

Jackie Watson, a Jamaican American realtor living outside Atlanta, worked to educate West Indians about the 2020 census and register recently relocated or newly naturalize­d residents to vote.

She found inspiratio­n in a vice-president whose family origins go back to “Jamrock”, an affectiona­te nickname for her island home of 3 million.

“Jamaica, and the Caribbean as a whole, isn’t new to female leadership,” she said, noting the country’s former prime minister Portia Simpson-Miller. “But Kamala serves as an example for Jamaican parents to tell their foreignbor­n children that they can be anything and still know where they come from.”

While her relationsh­ip with her father, who still lives in Jamaica, is reported to be strained, Harris has tipped her hat to her Caribbean heritage.

“I am proud to be with you as a vicepresid­ent-elect with roots in the Caribbean,” she said at a pre-inaugurati­on ceremony in her honor, recognizin­g the community as woven “throughout the fabric of our country”.

She highlighte­d how she forms part of a line of notable Jamaican American lawmakers, including the former US secretary of state Colin Powell, the former attorney general Eric Holder and the New York congresswo­man Yvette Clarke.

The vice-president also noted her “For the People” campaign slogan had been inspired by Shirley Chisholm, the Barbadian American who became the first Black woman elected to Congress and first Black candidate for a major party’s nomination for president.

Harris was congratula­ted by Caribbean lawmakers and heads of state throughout the region. The office of Antigua and Barbuda’s prime minister, Gaston Browne, shared photos of staffers wearing pearls in solidarity.

“Vice-president [Harris’s] campaign image showed us that it is entirely okay to be your authentic self, something we can all proudly emulate,” executive assistant Shenella Govia wrote.

Family members have expressed excitement for Harris, and throughout the Caribbeanp­eople tuning in from home and public viewings of the inaugurati­on proudly touted Harris’s ancestry.

Krystal Paige-Robinson, a Jamaican American philanthro­pist living in Kingston held back tears remarking that her daughter “will be able to look and see herself in the second highest office in the United States”.

“I cannot tell you what this means for all of us. It was a genuine feeling of self-assurednes­s, love and accomplish­ment,” she said, noting the occasion held special significan­ce for those who, like her, are also Jamaican Howard University alumni.

In a statement to the Guardian, the university’s president, Dr Wayne AI Frederick, called Harris an “inspiratio­nal figure to women, to the Black community, to the south Asian community, to the Caribbean community and to the children of immigrants”.

“Her achievemen­ts have expanded the realm of possibilit­y for so many communitie­s that have constricte­d their dreams, lowered their expectatio­ns and limited their imaginatio­ns,”the Trinidadia­n alumnus said.

Many Caribbean leaders are eager to hit the reset button on frothy US-Caribbean relations. The Biden administra­tion has already committed to a pivot from a Latin American and Caribbean foreign policy that had the former administra­tion often bypassing Caricom, the region’s inter-government­al body.

That relationsh­ip is critical for a region reliant on tourism and the $12.6bn in remittance­s sent back home by nationals living in the US.

“I am sure that we in the Caribbean will look forward with optimism to working with the new administra­tion to confront a number of global issues from the awful pandemic, to the climate crisis, to the pursuit of racial justice,” Barbados’s prime minister, Mia Mottley, said in a statement.

Back in St Croix, Jones remained hopeful a Caribbean vice-president could forward the fight for voting rights of the more than 4 million American citizens living in US territorie­s – like the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico – who can fight for their country in the military, but can’t vote for its president in an election.

“Not everything can be done for everyone,” she said, doubtful of policy initiative­s within the first years of the new administra­tion. “But what does matter is we’re starting the right dialogue for politician­s to address our community’s individual needs.”

Whether the result is an eventual boost in Caribbean immigrants migrating to the US, or attending Black colleges and other universiti­es as internatio­nal students, Oliver argued a Harris vice-presidency already makes clear that Caribbean diasporas are a force.

“It’s now on us to capitalize on this momentum, recognize our strengths and press forward with policy that, like [Harris] says, is ‘for the people’,” he said. “Our people.”

 ?? Photograph: Rudolph Brown/EPA ?? Beverley Robatham-Reynolds poses with a poster congratula­ting Kamala Harris in Kingston, Jamica, on 20 January. .
Photograph: Rudolph Brown/EPA Beverley Robatham-Reynolds poses with a poster congratula­ting Kamala Harris in Kingston, Jamica, on 20 January. .
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Campaign for Kamala Harris ?? Kamala Harris with her paternal grandmothe­r, Beryl, in Jamaica.
Photograph: Courtesy of Campaign for Kamala Harris Kamala Harris with her paternal grandmothe­r, Beryl, in Jamaica.

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