Washington: Kamala Devi Harris, Vivek Murthy, Gautam Raghavan, Mala Adiga, Vinay Reddy, Bharat Ramamurti, Neera Tanden, Celine Gounder, Atul Gawande are some of the Indian names that are blooming more now than at any other time in the innermost circles of the White House and that too within weeks after the #MyNameIs blowback to Republicans' mangling of US Vice President-elect Kamala Harris' first name during the 2020 campaign.
Till date, nearly two dozen Indian-Americans have been appointed or nominated to high powered positions on the Biden-Harris A-team.
"KAH'-mah-lah? Kah-MAH'-lah? Kamala-mala-mala? I don't know. Whatever," Republican Senator David Perdue, an ally of outgoing President Donald Trump, mocked as crowds of Trump fans erupted in laughter ahead of a super spreader-type rally in Macon before the November 3, 2020 election.
As Perdue made a spectacle of himself, little did he or Trump know that two dozen Indian names would make it to the who's who of the 2021 White House or that the blowback to the Senator's comments would lead to record fundraising in Georgia, a whopping $1.8 million in 48 hours, where two Senate races were still to be decided.
By January 6, the day a violent pro-Trump mob attacked the Capitol building in Washington D.C., Harris' Democratic party colleagues had won both the Georgia Senate seats, America's balance of power had been transformed.
When Harris and President-elect Joe Biden take their oaths to lead America, they also herald the arrival to the White House of Indian-American success stories across a wide arc of subject matter expertise including medicine, economics, digital communications and storytelling.
There's nothing remotely American about the lion's share of these names - Gautam Raghavan, Vivek Murthy, Mala Adiga, Vinay Reddy, Bharat Ramamurthi, Neera Tanden, Celine Gounder.
Their Indian-ness is total, it's for the white Americans to go figure that Murthy is 'Moor-thee' and not 'Mirth-y', that the second syllable in Gautam is 'tham' as in 'thump' and not 'tam' as in Tim-Tam and so on.
Harris has spent a lot of time explaining her name to America
"First, my name is pronounced "comma-la", like the punctuation mark. It means "lotus flower". which is a symbol of significance in Indian culture. A lotus grows underwater, its flower rising above the surface while its roots are planted firmly in the river bottom," she wrote in her memoir, "The Truths We Hold".
During the campaign, that became a GIF, a video, a meme and every kind of cultural insert on the internet.
When Shyamala Gopalan Harris chose to name her firstborn Kamala, it was intentional and carefully thought through.