
Vice
President Kamala Harris, third from the right, is flanked by her Alpha
Kappa Alpha Inc. line sisters during a visit to the V.P.’s residence in
2022.
Kamala Harris, left, poses with her AKA sisters Lisa and Tony when they were students at Howard University.
Monique Poydras was at a reggae concert at a vineyard in Linganore, Maryland, when her phone began vibrating frantically. As text after text and call after call rolled in, the device continued to shake until it eventually fell off the chair.
“I was like, ‘Oh, my God, what in the world?’” Poydras recalled saying to herself.
She checked her phone, and that’s when the cause of the pandemonium came into focus. Kamala Harris had just announced her run for president, and Poydras’ circle wanted to discuss the news.
Soon, other concertgoers started scrolling on their phones as alerts of the news poured in, and some of the excited murmurings of the group, Poydras said, swelled into one collective exclamation: “Oh my God, Kamala is in.”
“It was just the best feeling,” Poydras said, remembering the way the women around her, particularly moved by the announcement, responded with glee. “And we were like, ‘Oh, we’re about to mobilize like people have never seen in this country before,’” she added.
She stepped away from the booming music and proceeded to spend the following two hours on the phone talking about and celebrating the moment.
Poydras,
an attorney and vice president of a minority engineering and technology
firm, isn’t just another of Harris’ supporters. She and Harris go way
back, back to the 1980s when they were college students at Howard
University. Most importantly they were line sisters in Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority, Inc., the oldest sorority founded by African American women
and one of the Divine Nine organizations.
Initiated
into their chapter in the spring of 1986, Poydras, Harris and their 36
other line sisters made up the Jewels of Iridescent Splendor. When her
phone had been blowing up at the concert, it was her line sisters
calling to ask if she’d seen the news about their fellow Alpha Kappa
Alpha Sorority, Inc. Alpha sister.
When Poydras met Harris in college, the pair immediately found common ground.
Like
Harris, whose father is Jamaican and whose mother is Indian, Poydras, a
New York native, is also of Caribbean and South Asian descent, and she
immediately noticed the similarities.
“I just kind of knew because she looked like she could be in my family,” Poydras said.
Through
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Poydras and Harris became sisters,
joining what is now a 116-year-old organization made up of over 360,000
members and 12 chapters worldwide, according to its website.
On
campus, the line sisters participated in community service activities
and, bolstered by the environment at Howard which encouraged them to
speak their minds freely, they were also involved in social action.
Poydras recalled she, Harris and her other line sisters protesting
apartheid in South Africa.
Harris
was “bright” with a sense of humor, Poydras said. She was also
compassionate and cared for the “person out here just trying to make
it.”
“What you see right now is what we saw,” Poydras said of Harris, just with a decades-long political career under her belt.
In
the eyes of Kuae Noel Kelch, another one of the line sisters, Harris
was serious and committed and “had a command of her senses.”
The young women in line were ordered by height and assigned a number that corresponded to their position. Kelch was number 31.
Harris was 15, which meant she was shorter than Kelch, Kelch pointed out jokingly.
The
women also had nicknames, and Harris’ poised personality earned her the
tag of C-cubed, or C3, “which stood for ‘calm, cool and collected,’”
said Kelch, vice president of media relations at Mercury Public Affairs
and national president of nonprofit Mocha Moms. “Everybody knew that
Kamala was calm and cool and collected under stress, under deadlines,
under anything that we had to do together.”
Each
of the women in the line had their strengths, and each had a role to
play in the sorority’s activities. Some were good at math while others
excelled in communications or organizing.
“Kamala had leadership from the very beginning.
We saw it and we knew it,” Kelch said, citing Harris’ strength, resolve, dignity and confidence as her other standout qualities.
For
Kelch, Harris’s ascension to the political peak “feels like a full
circle moment, she said. The women in their line are the daughters of
people who fought in the Civil Rights Movement and had big dreams for
their children.
When
Kelch and her line sisters arrived on Howard’s campus as “extensions of
our parents” and signed up for various activities, they too “had the
sense that we were running a cause greater than our own. We weren’t just
there to study and party and have fun; we were there to make an impact
in our lives.”
One of Kelch’s line sisters tells a story of how Harris
used to walk around campus with a briefcase. While Kelch said she
didn’t see the briefcase herself, she wouldn’t be surprised if it were
true. Harris took her duties seriously and, armed with the leadership
skills and confidence instilled in Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
members, “it is no wonder that my sister has risen to this level. We
always knew it was possible,” Kelch said.
Since
they all graduated from Howard in the mid-80s, Kelch, Poydras and their
other line sisters have stayed in touch, following each other’s careers
and regularly meeting over Zoom.
While
Harris might be too busy to join their catch-up calls, the line sisters
have kept a keen eye on her career, watching as Harris made huge career
strides from attorney general to junior senator to holding the most
powerful leadership position ever held by a woman in American history.
Harris
is just a few weeks into her presidential campaign, but Poydras already
sees the momentum the vice presidential incumbent has gained.
“A
lot of people look at her and hear what she says,” she said. “And they
understand the message. And they understand that she’s for the people,
that she’s fighting
for democracy, and that she understands that democracy is under attack,
and she’s willing to go toe to toe to make sure that we have our rights
intact.”
The line
sisters have supported Harris along the way, including fundraising for
her short-lived presidential run in 2020. Now, as Harris swings for the
position once again, Kelch said, the sisters plan to continue to stand
by her.
“This is the
big league,” Kelch said, and Harris’ line sisters and fellow Alpha Kappa
Alpha Sorority, Inc. members have kicked their mobilizing into full
gear. They have already been fundraising for the campaign and mobilizing
for voter registration, and dozens of them plan to attend the
Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week.
Given
Harris’ hope, optimism, “energy and exuberance” and her “ability to
strategize,” Kelch said she thinks the second time could be the charm.
“I
have a really, really good feeling that this is the right time for the
country, that the country is ready, open and willing to vote Kamala
Harris,” Kelch said. “And I also have a really strong feeling — I’m
deeply confident — that she is ready for the United States.”