Rama Duwaji

American artist, First Lady of New York City (born 1997) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rama Sawaf Duwaji[a] (born June 30, 1997) is an American animator, illustrator, and ceramist, whose work has been featured across several media outlets and art venues in the US and Europe. She has been the first lady of New York City since the inauguration of her husband Zohran Mamdani as its mayor in January 2026.

Preceded byTracey Collins (de facto)
BornRama Sawaf Duwaji
(1997-06-30) June 30, 1997 (age 28)
Houston, Texas, U.S.
Spouse
(m. 2025)
Quick facts First Lady of New York City, Mayor ...
Rama Duwaji
Duwaji in January 2026
First Lady of New York City
Current
Assumed role
January 1, 2026
MayorZohran Mamdani
Preceded byTracey Collins (de facto)
Personal details
BornRama Sawaf Duwaji
(1997-06-30) June 30, 1997 (age 28)
Houston, Texas, U.S.
Spouse
(m. 2025)
Relatives
Education
Occupation
Websiteramaduwaji.com
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Early life and education

Rama Sawaf Duwaji[1] was born on June 30, 1997[2] in Houston, Texas, to Syrian Muslim parents from Damascus.[2][3][4] Her father, Marwan Duwaji, is a software developer, and her mother, Bariah Dardari, is a pediatrician who also worked on humanitarian missions in warzones with the Syrian American Medical Society;[5][6][better source needed] the couple had married shortly before her birth.[6] In 2006, following Dardari's appointment at the local American Hospital, the family left their home in Wayne, New Jersey, and moved to Dubai, United Arab Emirates,[5][6][7] and Duwaji spent the remainder of her childhood in the Arab states of the Persian Gulf.[8]

Duwaji has described drawing as her solace, and she would often get in trouble for doodling in her textbooks and notebooks at school.[5] Her parents were supportive of her love of art, but encouraged her to be practical with her career choices.[5] After graduating from high school, Duwaji studied communication arts at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts.[5][7] She first attended classes at the school's satellite campus in Doha, Qatar, during her freshman year, then transferred to its main campus in Richmond, Virginia,[5][7] where she obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts cum laude in 2019.[5][9]

Duwaji then returned to her family in Dubai and participated in various artist residencies, including in Beirut, Lebanon, and in Paris, France,[5] until moving to New York City in 2021 to study illustration as a visual essay at the School of Visual Arts.[5] There, she earned a Master of Fine Arts in 2024,[5][10] with a graduate thesis focused on making and sharing dishes as a communal act.[5] After obtaining her master's degree, Duwaji was one of 24 artists selected from more than 500 applicants for an artist residency in the Catskill Mountains, New York.[5]

Artistry

Duwaji's illustrations often explore Arab culture and focus on social justice in the Middle East, particularly women's rights,[4][10] but also depict scenes of daily life in those countries.[5] She told YUNG magazine, "I used to want my work to move everyone. Now I just want it to move someone – the people who need it."[11] Her work has been published in The New York Times and The Washington Post, as well as British outlets and venues like the BBC and Tate Modern, and she has collaborated with Spotify and Apple.[3][10]

Since 2023, Duwaji has created numerous works about the Gaza genocide and the Israel–Hezbollah conflict, as well as artwork supporting the victims of the Sudanese Civil War.[5][12]

Personal life

Duwaji and her husband at his mayoral inauguration

Duwaji met Zohran Mamdani  the son of academic Mahmood Mamdani and filmmaker Mira Nair  on the dating app Hinge in 2021, when he was a member of the New York State Assembly.[5][7][10][13] They were engaged in October 2024,[7] held a private nikah ceremony two months later in Dubai,[10][14] and married in February 2025 in a civil ceremony at New York City Hall;[5][12] they also had a ceremony in Uganda  Mamdani's birth country  in July 2025.[5]

Following Mamdani's victory in the 2025 mayoral election, and his subsequent inauguration as mayor, Duwaji became the first lady of New York City in January 2026,[5] making her the first Gen Z-er and the first Muslim to assume the role.[15] She helped curate visuals for his campaign.[2][16]

The couple resided in Mamdani's legislative district of Astoria, Queens, near Steinway Street,[4][5] until they moved into Gracie Mansion on January 12, 2026, after taking office.[17]

Social media controversy

In March 2026, media outlets reported that Duwaji had "liked" several Instagram posts supportive of the Palestinian cause following the October 7 attacks, which caused controversy due to her husband Zohran Mamdani's public position as New York City mayor. Mamdani commented that she is a private person who has held no formal role in his campaign or administration, and noted that the posts were "liked" before the couple married in early 2025 and before he launched his mayoral campaign in October 2024.[18][19][20] Duwaji faced additional criticism for illustrating a work by a Gazan resident in a collection of stories compiled by Palestinian writer, author and activist Susan Abulhawa, who has made statements deemed by some controversial, incendiary or outright racist regarding Jews and Israelis.[21][22] In a press conference, Mamdani distanced himself from Abulhawa's words, which he qualified as "reprehensible",[23][24] but, when asked about his wife's social media activity, he said that she is a "private person".[24][25]

Around the same time, a report by the conservative outlet The Washington Free Beacon found that, during the 2013–2017 period, Duwaji had posted content celebratory of Palestinian political violence  including support for PFLP members Leila Khaled and Shadia Abu Ghazaleh, as well as an image of a demonstrator from the First Intifada sewing a Palestinian flag  on her social media; the report highlighted her usage of racial slurs and statements such as "Fuck Tel Aviv. Shouldn't exist in the first place."[23][24][26][27] Other outlets also found her to have used the word "gay" in a derogatory manner.[24] Following media scrutiny, Duwaji appeared to have deleted her old social media profiles.[28][29]

The following month, in an interview with Hyperallergic, she mentioned having felt "shame" over the "harmful" language she used online as a teenager, without referencing any of the specific cases listed by the Free Beacon.[30][25]

Notes

  1. Arabic: رَامَا صَوَاف دُوَجِي, romanized: Rāmā Ṣawāf Duwajī.

References

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