The Prague Post - Behind the veil: The double life of Pakistan rapper Eva B

EUR -
AED 4.277795
AFN 79.454093
ALL 97.30052
AMD 446.710566
ANG 2.084672
AOA 1068.137432
ARS 1542.882408
AUD 1.78516
AWG 2.099582
AZN 1.984813
BAM 1.955409
BBD 2.34893
BDT 141.341703
BGN 1.955442
BHD 0.435813
BIF 3468.905508
BMD 1.164817
BND 1.495001
BOB 8.038391
BRL 6.327057
BSD 1.163367
BTN 101.866606
BWP 15.652866
BYN 3.840931
BYR 22830.409242
BZD 2.336832
CAD 1.602148
CDF 3366.320968
CHF 0.943007
CLF 0.028809
CLP 1130.183732
CNY 8.365137
CNH 8.374014
COP 4711.556724
CRC 589.481983
CUC 1.164817
CUP 30.867645
CVE 110.242929
CZK 24.442055
DJF 207.158526
DKK 7.468228
DOP 71.045776
DZD 150.162937
EGP 56.111766
ERN 17.472252
ETB 161.427381
FJD 2.623522
FKP 0.86647
GBP 0.867292
GEL 3.149503
GGP 0.86647
GHS 12.273543
GIP 0.86647
GMD 84.453703
GNF 10087.980338
GTQ 8.926213
GYD 243.391272
HKD 9.143754
HNL 30.461901
HRK 7.538741
HTG 152.219525
HUF 395.54894
IDR 18935.378351
ILS 3.996131
IMP 0.86647
INR 102.18268
IQD 1523.994889
IRR 49067.908029
ISK 143.074897
JEP 0.86647
JMD 186.262709
JOD 0.825901
JPY 171.975304
KES 150.249919
KGS 101.863677
KHR 4660.067032
KMF 491.727858
KPW 1048.335119
KRW 1617.663071
KWD 0.355887
KYD 0.969506
KZT 628.684134
LAK 25169.960853
LBP 104235.431566
LKR 349.879952
LRD 233.253302
LSL 20.620672
LTL 3.439402
LVL 0.704587
LYD 6.307737
MAD 10.535191
MDL 19.53209
MGA 5133.972154
MKD 61.522683
MMK 2445.809597
MNT 4186.676964
MOP 9.405917
MRU 46.40471
MUR 52.894772
MVR 17.942534
MWK 2017.296128
MXN 21.642184
MYR 4.939263
MZN 74.502122
NAD 20.620672
NGN 1784.83757
NIO 42.811429
NOK 11.97735
NPR 162.986369
NZD 1.952916
OMR 0.444461
PAB 1.163367
PEN 4.117676
PGK 4.907018
PHP 66.10379
PKR 330.098313
PLN 4.248949
PYG 8713.255564
QAR 4.252049
RON 5.073131
RSD 117.126551
RUB 92.881405
RWF 1682.763103
SAR 4.371281
SBD 9.571376
SCR 17.146667
SDG 699.476769
SEK 11.157552
SGD 1.49726
SHP 0.915363
SLE 26.911539
SLL 24425.630445
SOS 664.86689
SRD 43.42325
STD 24109.355964
STN 24.495096
SVC 10.178962
SYP 15144.774335
SZL 20.612873
THB 37.652747
TJS 10.865625
TMT 4.088507
TND 3.411717
TOP 2.728122
TRY 47.518745
TTD 7.896419
TWD 34.836297
TZS 2890.921224
UAH 48.123765
UGX 4151.168916
USD 1.164817
UYU 46.680654
UZS 14651.066786
VES 149.967542
VND 30547.32053
VUV 139.080864
WST 3.091326
XAF 655.825701
XAG 0.030372
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.147976
XCG 2.09668
XDR 0.815637
XOF 655.825701
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.080622
ZAR 20.68321
ZMK 10484.753138
ZMW 26.960602
ZWL 375.070534
  • RBGPF

    1.2400

    73.08

    +1.7%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    -1.1000

    82.09

    -1.34%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.05

    +0.39%

  • RIO

    1.0900

    61.86

    +1.76%

  • RELX

    -1.0566

    48

    -2.2%

  • NGG

    -1.0700

    71.01

    -1.51%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    15.88

    -0.76%

  • JRI

    0.0250

    13.435

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.8

    +0.58%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    14.42

    -0.14%

  • AZN

    -0.5050

    73.55

    -0.69%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.24

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    11.36

    +0.88%

  • BCE

    0.5700

    24.35

    +2.34%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    34.14

    -0.15%

Behind the veil: The double life of Pakistan rapper Eva B
Behind the veil: The double life of Pakistan rapper Eva B / Photo: Asif HASSAN - AFP

Behind the veil: The double life of Pakistan rapper Eva B

Pakistan's breakthrough rapper Eva B has racked up millions of views online, but walking through the labyrinthine streets of her Karachi neighbourhood, she is anonymous.

Text size:

Her hair covered with a hijab and a veil falling below her eyes, she evades the attention of fans and detractors.

"It’s funny that people don’t recognise me, they play my songs but when I'm in front of them they don't know it’s me," the 22-year-old told AFP from a rooftop overlooking the mega port city of Karachi.

Inspired by American rappers Eminem and Queen Latifah, she started writing lyrics from her bedroom and posting her raps to Facebook where she built up a following.

Afraid of angering her family, she would sneak to music studios to record full tracks with the help of other emerging artists in her neighbourhood, under the pretext of studying.

But when word reached her brother, she received a backlash from her family who considered the genre indecent for a young girl and who feared she would struggle to marry in deeply conservative Pakistan.

"Later they realized that I was quite persistent, so they surrendered. They realised I couldn’t be stopped," she laughed, adding that her mother now supports her in the studio and on set.

Eva B's rise to fame was accelerated this year when Coca-Cola's international music franchise Coke Studios –- one of the most popular television programmes in Pakistan –- invited her collaborate for its 2022 series.

The music video for "Kana Yaari", which features Eva B rapping in a bright orange hijab about the betrayal of a love interest, has more than 16 million views on YouTube.

But unlike other artists in the series, she has shunned a celebrity status.

"It is strange to live two lives. People know me, but at the same time they don’t really know me," she said.

She finds it amusing to nod along to conversations in cafes or at friends' weddings when people talk about the latest track from Eva B.

On rare occasions, she says people recognise her from her eyes, but she always denies her stage identity.

"I'm ok with what I am. I can’t handle everybody," she says of the attention from media and fans she would otherwise attract.

- Industry 'astonished' by hijab -

Most women wear some form of hijab covering in Muslim-majority Pakistan but there are very few music artists in local pop culture who are veiled.

Turning up to studios for the first time, industry producers and managers were often left "astonished", she said.

"They reacted like 'what is this?'," she said. "But then everything soon became normal."

For Eva B, the hijab has always been a proud part of her Muslim identity -- but it has also defined her image as a rapper.

"These days I wear more stylish clothes for the music videos so I stand out. But even then I always wear my hijab," she said, adding that she sometimes swaps the face veil for a pandemic-era mask.

She has, however, grown weary of the conversation around how she dresses.

"The media has focused on my hijab rather than me... they do it for hype," she said. "It's normal in my society. Don't let it be breaking news."

What she does delight her are the stream of Instagram messages from girls and women thrilled to see a woman in a hijab represented in mainstream media.

"I feel happy that I inspire them... that they feel proud of me," she said.

But as a woman rapper in a hijab, disapproval for not being "a good girl" is never far away, she says.

"There is nothing harmful in what I am doing, I openly sing songs and there is nothing bad in that."

- Straight outta Karachi -

Eva B grew up in Lyari, a Karachi neighbourhood haunted by gang violence and poverty for decades and once considered one of Pakistan’s most dangerous areas, but which inspired a generation of artists and spawned a burgeoning hip hop scene.

With its close proximity to the sea and history of smuggling, the largely ethnic Balochi neighbourhood in Karachi stands apart for its history of violence and lawlessness — even by Pakistan's standards.

But the worst of the violence has abated, and an increase in security has led to flowering creativity.

The embattled neighbourhood now clings fiercely to its reputation for producing top footballers, iron-chinned boxers, and most recently socially conscious rappers.

"We didn’t attend any prestigious music schools, we learned everything ourselves, driven by our passion. So I keep highlighting Lyari and I’m proud of it," she said.

The rise of hip hop in Lyari mirrors the genre's birth decades ago in New York’s Bronx borough, where it largely centred around street performances and featured lyrics that addressed social ills and life in urban ghettos.

Eva B also speaks straightforwardly about the difficulties women face and the disparity in wealth in Pakistan, and even the sensitive issue of local corruption.

Her favourite song, "Bayani Rog", in her native Balochi language, tells the story of her evolution from shy, nervous teenager to the self-assured, frank woman she is today.

"I realized that keeping silent won’t work, so I better speak up," she said.

R.Krejci--TPP