Current:Home > InvestThe improbable fame of a hijab-wearing teen rapper from a poor neighborhood in Mumbai -BrightFutureFinance
The improbable fame of a hijab-wearing teen rapper from a poor neighborhood in Mumbai
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:09:13
MUMBAI, India: It is two hours to a high profile rap performance in front of thousands of people at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. Saniya Mistri Qayammuddin – aka Saniya MQ – is waiting for her father to pick her up in his motorized auto rickshaw, a compact 3-wheel vehicle that he uses to ferry customers throughout the day. He is her designated chauffeur everytime she performs.
"I go in an auto even to the fanciest of places," she says. Saniya needs to be in the venue at least an hour in advance to do sound and music checks. "If my father has a customer in his auto already, he has to drop them off wherever they say first," she says, checking the time on her plastic wristwatch.
On this spring Sunday, the auditorium is teeming with people from the posh neighborhoods of central Mumba, who'll hear the 16-year-old rap about inequality. One of the headliners, she is dressed in orange slacks, a shimmering silk tunic called a kurta that covers her knees and a white and orange headscarf. She does not step out without her headscarf or hijab. She is Muslim and notes, "It is not that I am very religious, but I am out in the world to create my own identity, and now people recognize me as the girl in the hijab who raps."
A rapper's inspiration — and message
Saniya lives in a 12-foot by 12-foot home, made from tin sheets and mud, in the neighborhood of Govandi — a community of roughly 100,000 people that is often described as a slum and is known for heaps of sewage and trash strewn all over and high rates of crime. In some of her videos, she stands in front of seven-foot-tall hills of trash as she moves her arms to the beat of the song. Sometimes she'll point at those piles and rap about how one half of Mumbai lives next to the trash while the other half generates most of it.
She lives with her parents and her younger brother, down a narrow lane with open drains that send sewage-laden water running down the streets.
Saniya began writing poetry at age 8 and started rapping three years ago, inspired by a Bollywood film called Gully Boy, based on the lives of rappers in Dharavi. The movie came out in 2019 and was India's official Oscar entry the following year. When Saniya watched the film, something shifted within her. "I really wanted my identity to be about hip hop," she says.
She honed her rap skills at free classes twice a week at The Dharavi Dream Project.
When COVID hit in 2020 and the world went into successive lockdowns, Saniya began writing raps in Hindi, her mother tongue. And she began making videos and posting them on YouTube.
Those videos drew criticism from neighbors and acquaintances. They thought her rap videos were "haram" – un-Islamic – because Islam forbids images of human beings. People told her mother to stop her from shooting videos.
Her mother, who earns a meager income as a tailor, thought her daughter should follow her rap muse. So did Saniya.
Saniya has a clear vision of what to rap about. "My songs cover a range of issues that affect Indian teenagers like me," she says. But she's not talking about typical teen topics like clothes, shoes and movies. Instead she is referring to creating an identity, environmental justice and world peace. "My identity as a woman is important to my existence," she says. One of the most watched videos on her YouTube channel is titled "Bahot Dheet" — Hindi for "Very Resilient."
"There'll always be hurdles but I never let them dampen my spirit," she raps in that song. That's the way a woman needs to live her life in conservative societies, she says.
"She is a bit raw but has great potential," says Bhanuj Kappal, a Mumbai-based music writer who follows the city's hip hop scene. He has seen Saniya perform a few times and is impressed by the range of subjects she touches upon.
A breakthrough moment
Her big break came about a year ago when she performed on a national television show hosted by top Hindi film producers and actors. The show, Hunarbaaz, which means "the talented," is a bit like America's Got Talent.
Today she is the heartthrob of the city of about 20 million people. A recent comment on her Instagram profile reads, "One girl with courage is a revolution @saniya_mq and that girl is YOU."
Her fame has brought her to major venues in the city including the National Center for the Performing Arts, Mumbai's equivalent of the Kennedy Center. She is paid for some of her performances, but the money isn't enough to enable her family to move to nicer quarters.
Reflecting on her art, she says, "I think I am a better poet, but people say I am a better rapper."
Her parents, she says, ask her to balance her studies with her YouTube channel. So she keeps up with her schoolwork, writing rap songs and shooting videos when she's done studying. Asked about her future goals, she says she doesn't yet know.
On a windy January afternoon, two young girls stride into Saniya's small home. She doesn't know who they are. They are from Govandi, the same neighborhood. They pull out their phones and ask Saniya to take pictures with them. Saniya is used to this. "I do have some fans," she says coyly.
The girls have seen Saniya rapping on the TV show and have been in awe of her ever since. One of them is 11-year-old Falak Naaz. "I want to become like her," Falak says. But Saniya tells Falak she has it all wrong. Do not follow anyone's footsteps. Create your own path. "You are your own strength," she tells Falak.
veryGood! (63)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- What do we know about Princess Kate's cancer diagnosis so far? Doctors share insights
- Florida’s DeSantis signs one of the country’s most restrictive social media bans for minors
- Kate, Princess of Wales, announces cancer diagnosis, says she is undergoing preventative chemotherapy
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Lil Jon swaps crunk for calm with new album Total Meditation
- Women's March Madness games today: Schedule, how to watch Monday's NCAA Tournament
- Philadelphia prison chief to leave job after string of inmate deaths and escapes
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- The Daily Money: Good news for your 401(k)?
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- A mother killed her 5-year-old daughter and hid the body, prosecutors in Syracuse say
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Jump Start
- Navy identifies U.S. sailor lost overboard in Red Sea
- 'Most Whopper
- Ukraine had no involvement in Russia concert hall attack that killed at least 133, U.S. says
- Authorities ID brothers attacked, 1 fatally, by a mountain lion in California
- Men’s March Madness Sunday recap: UConn, Duke, Houston, Purdue reach Sweet 16
Recommendation
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
How to make tofu (that doesn't suck): Recipes and tips for frying, baking, cooking
Supreme Court again confronts the issue of abortion, this time over access to widely used medication
New government spending bill bans U.S. embassies from flying Pride flag
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Candiace Dillard Bassett announces 'RHOP' exit after 6 seasons: 'This is not a farewell'
Fareed Zakaria decries the anti-Americanism in America's politics today
Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos dies at 94