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Indian village with ties to Usha Vance celebrates Trump victory, dismay in Harris' ancestral village (photos)

Indian village with ties to Usha Vance celebrates Trump victory, dismay in Harris' ancestral village (photos)

Topline

The results of the US presidential election sparked contrasting reactions in two small villages in southern India, as residents of Vadluru – the ancestral home of Vice President-elect JD Vance's wife, Usha – celebrated President-elect Donald Trump's victory, while residents of Kamala Harris The ancestral village of Thulasendrapuram was dismayed by their defeat.

Important facts

Vadluru, located in the Telegu-speaking southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, celebrated the news that Usha Vance would become the next US Second Lady with fireworks.

The village's Hindu priest had organized special prayers for a Trump victory and told the Hindustan Times that they hoped she would “recognize her roots and do something good for this village.”

Vance's grandfather lived in Vadluru but eventually moved out and her father Chilukuri Radhakrishnan grew up mostly in the city of Chennai before moving to the United States

The Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh also celebrated Vance's achievement and said, “Usha Vance, who has her roots in Andhra Pradesh, will be the first woman of Telugu heritage to serve as Second Lady of the USA,” calling it a “moment of Proud.” for the Telugu community.”

Contrasting scenes played out in Thulasendrapuram in the neighboring state of Tamil Nadu, where many residents who had been praying for a Harris win said they were disappointed by the result but still proud of her achievements.

A day before the US elections, a special puja (Hindu worship ritual) was held at the main temple in Thulasendrapuram, attended by some American tourists visiting the area.

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Important background

Usha Chilukuri Vance was born in San Diego, California, to Telugu-speaking parents who immigrated from India in the late 1970s and had roots in Andhra Pradesh. Vance comes from a family of academics; Her grandfather Ramasastry Chilukuri taught physics at the prestigious IIT Madras, and the institute still has a student award named after him. Her father Chilukuri Radhakrishnan is a mechanical engineering graduate from IIT Madras and later worked as a professor at San Diego State University, while her mother Laksmi Chilukuri is a marine molecular biologist and vice-chancellor at the University of California, San Diego. Vance's great aunt Shanthamma Chilukuri is one of her few close relatives who still lives in Andhra Pradesh. Local media claims that 96-year-old Shanthamma is the oldest active professor in the country. Vance herself is a graduate of Yale Law School.

tangent

Harris' maternal grandfather, PV Gopalan, was born in Thulasendrapuram in 1911. He later became a civil servant in British-ruled India, which eventually became the Indian Civil Service after the country's independence. Later in his life, Gopalan served on an Indian diplomatic mission to Zambia to help the country deal with the influx of refugees from Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) as the country fought for its independence. Harris' mother Shyamala was one of Gopalan's four children and she immigrated to the United States at the age of 19 to study at UC Berkeley. Harris' name, along with that of her maternal grandfather, is engraved on a stone tablet inside the village temple since the vice president made a donation to the temple in 2014 for its dedication following renovation.

Further reading

Kamala Harris' Ancestral Village in India celebrates her presidential run with prayers, sweets and cautious excitement (Forbes)

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