Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
India

Punjab's Teen Singer Ginni Mahi Takes Caste Voice To A New High

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jul, 2016 01:04 PM
    She took to singing when she was just seven and has, just a decade later, turned into a star of sorts within her community as she dared to wear her caste on her sleeve.
     
    Meet Ginni Mahi, a 17-year-old from Punjab's Jalandhar town who has no qualms about being from the lower stream of the caste divide in the country.
     
    Through her music video 'Danger Chamar', which she released last year (2015) and has notched up thousands of likes on YouTube, Ginni says that she has tried to break the shackles of the caste system that has been prevalent in the country's society for centuries.
     
    Ginni comes from the scheduled castes and is not shy to say that she is a 'chamar', a low caste that used to be looked down upon by the caste-divided society till the constitution put a ban on doing so.
     
    The 'Danger Chamar' title for the song, according to Ginni, came after one of her friends in college here asked about her caste.
     
    "The thought of creating a song (on the caste divide) came when I was asked about my caste in college. When I said that I was a chamar, the girl said that chamars are quite dangerous," said Ginni, a devotee of 15th century saint Ravidas.
     
     
    Ginni says that through her song, she has tried to point out that the chamars, a word considered derogatory under the law, are "dangerous to the extent that they can sacrifice anything to fight injustice".
     
    She belongs to the Ravidassia community, which has a large following in Punjab's Doaba region (the extremely fertile belt between the Sutlej and Beas rivers). The community is a part of the scheduled castes. Sant Ravidas is revered in Punjab as a Dalit icon.
     
    The video portrays her as a modern singing sensation -- backed with muscled youth, jeeps and the singer herself in jeans and sporting a leather jacket.
     
     
    A keen follower of Bhim Rao Ambedkar, the chairman of the committee that drafted independent India's constitution, Ginni has sung another song "Fan Baba Sahib Di" that highlights Ambedkar's contribution to bridging the caste divide in the country. Ambedkar is popularly known as "Baba Sahib".
     
    Ginni's popularity through her songs has grown within Punjab's Dalit community and her bold endeavour has helped in its empowerment.
     
    At 32 per cent of its nearly 28 million population, Punjab has the highest percentage of Dalits among all states. A majority of the community is based in the Doaba belt.
     
     
    The teenaged-singer hit the social media platforms through her first album, "Guruan di Diwani" that came out in 2015. Her popularity can be gauged from the Rs 30,000-per performance she attracts in the market.
     
    But Ginni does not want to sing community-based songs alone. Her ambition is to hit it big as a playback singer in Bollywood's music industry "so that I can reach out to a bigger audience". Her love is for devotional and Sufi songs.
     
    Her parents, Rakesh and Paramjeet Kaur Mahi, are solidly behind Ginni in her pursuit of singing excellence.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Police Allege Black Widow Breaches Three Conditions Of Release From Prison

    Police Allege Black Widow Breaches Three Conditions Of Release From Prison
    Halifax police say 80-year-old Melissa Ann Shepard faces three counts of breaching the conditions imposed following her release.

    Police Allege Black Widow Breaches Three Conditions Of Release From Prison

    Mela Phulkari: Reviving The Threads Of Punjab

    Mela Phulkari: Reviving The Threads Of Punjab
    Talented artists, designers, photographers and craftsmen have brought in their own reading and understanding of Punjab at the exhibition. 

    Mela Phulkari: Reviving The Threads Of Punjab

    Sukhbir Singh Badal Hails Canada's Move To Apologise For The Komagata Maru Tragedy

    Sukhbir Singh Badal Hails Canada's Move To Apologise For The Komagata Maru Tragedy
    "It is very heartening that the Canadian government has decided to apologise in the country's parliament for the Komagata Maru episode to acknowledge the hurt caused to the (Sikh) community in 1914

    Sukhbir Singh Badal Hails Canada's Move To Apologise For The Komagata Maru Tragedy

    PM Modi,President, Vice President Extend Greetings On Baisakhi

    PM Modi,President, Vice President Extend Greetings On Baisakhi
    On the joyous occasion of Baisakhi, I extend greetings and good wishes to all fellow countrymen, especially sisters and brothers engaged in cultivation and farming

    PM Modi,President, Vice President Extend Greetings On Baisakhi

    British Royals Meet Victims Of Acid Attack, Domestic Abuse

    British Royals Meet Victims Of Acid Attack, Domestic Abuse
    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, on the third day of their official tour of India, met a group of Indian women, including an acid attack victim, to hear about a range of issues affecting women and girls in the country.

    British Royals Meet Victims Of Acid Attack, Domestic Abuse

    India To Get Normal Monsoon After Two Drought Years

    India To Get Normal Monsoon After Two Drought Years
    After two drought years, India will get more-than-normal monsoon rains in 2016 with a probability of 94 percent, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said in its first forecast for the season here on Tuesday.

    India To Get Normal Monsoon After Two Drought Years