Audio By Carbonatix
Zohran Kwame Mamdani’s middle name is more than a tribute — it is a symbol of political conviction, African identity, and generational consciousness. Born in Kampala, Uganda, on October 18, 1991, to postcolonial scholar Mahmood Mamdani and celebrated filmmaker Mira Nair, his father named him Kwame in honour of Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah — the man whose Pan-African dream continues to inspire movements for justice across the world.
That choice of name foreshadowed a life deeply intertwined with politics, activism, and social equity. The young Mamdani grew up amid continents and causes — from Uganda to South Africa, and later New York — constantly exposed to the global intersections of race, class, and identity. His father’s academic work and his mother’s storytelling combined to give him a rare lens on the world.
Mamdani spent his early years in Kampala before his family moved to Cape Town, South Africa, where his father headed African Studies at the University of Cape Town. Living in post-apartheid Cape Town left a lasting impression on him. He later reflected that the experience “taught me what inequality looks like up close… [and] that justice has to be more than an idea; it has to be material.”
At age seven, his family relocated to New York City. Raised in Morningside Heights, Mamdani was aware of his privilege but conscious that his comfort was not universal. “I never had to want for something, and yet I knew that was not in any way the reality for most New Yorkers,” he once said. That early awareness would later define his politics.
As a child, he spent time on his mother’s film sets, surrounded by artists who affectionately called him “Z,” “Zoru,” or “Nonstop Mamdani.” But even then, his curiosity leaned toward justice and activism. At the Bank Street School for Children, he won a mock election as an independent candidate, running on a platform of “equal rights” and an “anti-war policy that proposed spending money on education rather than the military.”
After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science in 2010 — where he co-founded the school’s first cricket team — Mamdani went on to Bowdoin College in Maine. There, he majored in Africana Studies and co-founded Students for Justice in Palestine, signalling early his commitment to global liberation struggles. He wrote a column called Kwame’s Kolumnalu, a title that again echoed the Pan-African name his father gave him.
His artistic side later found expression through music. Under the name Young Cardamom, he collaborated with Ugandan rapper HAB on the song Kanda (Chap Chap) — an ode to chapati and Kampala street life. Performing at Uganda’s Nyege Nyege Festival, he celebrated the fusion of cultures that defined him. In 2019, Mr Cardamom released Nani, a tender tribute to his grandmother, starring veteran actress Madhur Jaffrey. He also produced the soundtrack for his mother’s acclaimed film Queen of Katwe, earning a Guild of Music Supervisors Awards nomination.
Before entering politics, Mamdani worked as a housing counsellor in Queens, helping immigrant families fight foreclosure. The experience, he said, pushed him to seek office to address housing injustice and affordability concerns that resonate with the same revolutionary urgency that inspired his namesake, Kwame Nkrumah.
From Kampala to New York, from rap studios to legislative halls, Zohran Kwame Mamdani’s journey continues to carry the spirit of Kwame — a reminder that names, when given with vision, can become destinies.
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