How popular is the baby name Lakshmi in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Lakshmi.

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Popularity of the baby name Lakshmi


Posts that mention the name Lakshmi

Was Kamala Harris named after an actress?

Actress Kamala Devi (1933-2010)
Kamala Devi

With the presidential inauguration just two days away, now is a good time to take a closer look at the baby name Kamala.

Most Americans already know that Kamala Devi Harris’ first name is pronounced KAH-mah-lah (or “comma-la“). And I bet some also know that the Sanskrit name Kamala means “lotus,” and is sometimes used to refer to the Hindu deity Lakshmi.

But here’s an intriguing fact that isn’t very well known: usage of the baby name Kamala peaked in 1964 — the year that Kamala Harris was born.

  • 1967: 46 baby girls named Kamala
  • 1966: 51 baby girls named Kamala
  • 1965: 91 baby girls named Kamala
  • 1964: 105 baby girls named Kamala [rank: 1,064th]
  • 1963: 44 baby girls named Kamala
  • 1962: 20 baby girls named Kamala
  • 1961: 10 baby girls named Kamala

Here’s the graph:

Graph of the usage of the baby name Kamala in the U.S. since 1880
Usage of the baby name Kamala

What caused the spike?

I believe the influence was half-Indian, half-English actress Kamala Devi (birth name: Kamala Devi Amesur). She came to the U.S. from India around 1960, and over the course of the decade appeared in two U.S. films and on about ten TV shows (including My Three Sons).

The thing that put her name in the papers, though, was her 1963 marriage to actor Chuck Connors, her co-star in the 1962 film Geronimo. (You can see several press photos of the pair at one Chuck Connors fan site.) Here’s what Louella Parsons wrote about the couple in mid-1963:

The Brooklyn-born Irishman and the Bombay-born East Indian, married in April, are as unlikely a combination as you could dream up, but they seem ideally mated. Chuck and Kamala met when both played in “Geronimo.” She was the last actress to be interviewed for the lead opposite him. “I took one look at her,” says Chuck, “and that was it.”

So, now, back to Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

I have never seen anything that explicitly connects Kamala Devi Harris to Kamala Devi, but the fact that Harris’ middle name is Devi (which means “goddess”), and the fact that she was born in 1964, makes me think Harris’ parents were probably influenced by the actress — whether they were aware of it or not.

(Her parents, Donald Harris of Jamaica and Shyamala Gopalan of Tamil Nadu, met as graduate students in California in the fall of 1962. They married in July of 1963 and welcomed their first daughter, Kamala, the following year in October. Their second daughter, Maya Lakshmi, was born in early 1967.)

Regardless, Kamala Harris’s visibility over the last few years seems to have had a slight influence on the name:

  • 2020: 18 baby girls named Kamala
  • 2019: 13 baby girls named Kamala
  • 2018: 10 baby girls named Kamala
  • 2017: 10 baby girls named Kamala
  • 2016: 10 baby girls named Kamala

What are your thoughts on the name Kamala?

Sources:

Baby name stories: Tsunami

The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, which occurred in late December, triggered a deadly tsunami that reached a number of countries.

  • In Kerala, India, a couple named Kutten and Priyanka managed to escape the waves. Their newborn baby girl was rescued by a relative. They named their daughter Tsunami to commemorate the event, and their survival.
  • In the village of Baan Nam Khem in Thailand, a pregnant woman named Od Judet was swept up by the wave. “There were nine pregnant women in the village then. Only my baby survived. So we called her Tsunami.”
  • On Little Andaman island, Lakshmi Narain Roy and his pregnant wife Namita escaped the tsunami with the help of a cycle-rickshaw. Soon after, Namita gave birth to a baby boy, but suffered from complications. They made the 7-hour journey to a hospital in Port Blair, where doctors suggested that they name the baby Tsunami. So they did.

Parents in the U.S. started naming their babies Tsunami that year as well. The name debuted in the SSA’s data in 2004 and showed up again in 2005:

  • 2006: unlisted
  • 2005: 7 baby girls named Tsunami
  • 2004: 5 baby girls named Tsunami [debut]
  • 2003: unlisted

The Japanese word tsunami means “harbor wave.”

Interesting contrast: Hurricane Katrina (2005), which destroyed much of New Orleans eight months later, ultimately caused the popularity of the baby name Katrina to plummet in the U.S.

Update: Several years later, in 2009, a tsunami struck the Samoa Islands. In the village of Saleapaga, the two-day old son of Fineaso and Terri Agaalenuu was carried to safety by a relative. Originally named Narineaso, the baby was re-named Tsunami following his lucky escape.

Sources:

Image: The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1831) by Hokusai

[Latest update: Nov. 2023]