BirminghamNews
Local Desi community news

Troy and Metro Detroit's Desi Community Finds Its Voice in Food, Politics, and Civic Pride

An original summary by the Desi.Net Newsroom, written from the verified local sources linked below and reviewed before publishing. How we report. Details can change — spotted an error? Tell us.

For Troy's South Asian community, the 2024 presidential race has carried a deeply personal resonance, with Kamala Harris's Indian roots sparking a wave of pride and political mobilization unlike anything seen before in the region.

🗳️ 'Desis Decide': South Asian Voters Mobilize Across Metro Detroit

At a Harris-Walz campaign office in Canton Township, roughly 75 volunteers gathered on a rainy Sunday to canvass for Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris. Many wore 'Desis Decide' T-shirts, while bumper stickers reading 'LOTUS for POTUS' reflected a playful nod to Harris's heritage — the word Kamala derives from a Sanskrit term meaning lotus. The energy in the room captured the broader enthusiasm sweeping through metro Detroit's South Asian diaspora, a community that uses the term 'Desi' as a shared cultural identifier. For many attendees, supporting Harris represented both a political commitment and a moment of cultural pride. [1]

Sources: [1] The Detroit News

DESI.NETAdvertise on Desi.NetNative text ads woven into Birmingham's Desi daily — reach local families where they plan their week.Get in touch →
Desi.Net Newsroom — local Desi news, compiled from verified sources and reviewed before publishing. Our editorial standards →

More from the newsroom

Community Ties and Farewells: Carrollton Remembered in Recent ObituariesCarrollton Connections in the Real Estate Market: A Look at Local Housing OptionsA Richardson Father's Crime Against an Adopted Indian Child Ends in a Life SentenceRichardson's Indian Dining Scene Evolves as Masala Twist Reimagines Itself and Earns Regional Recognition
← Back to Birmingham Desi Lifestyle