2025-11-07 00:00:00 Ketika Zohran Mamdani membuat sejarah minggu ini dengan menjadi walikota New York pertama di Asia Selatan, kemenangannya dipandang sebagai peristiwa seismik dalam politik Amerika.
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Follow When Zohran Mamdani made history this week by becoming the first South Asian mayor of New York, he quoted one of modern Indiaâs founding fathers in his acceptance speech and walked off the stage to the sounds of a thumping Bollywood banger.
The Muslim son of Indian-origin immigrants, the win is a powerful rebuke of US President Donald Trump, who has sought to drastically curb immigration to the United States, and takes on a greater meaning in a city still contending with the deep scars of post 9/11 Islamophobia.
But the aftershocks of his success are also being felt more than 8,000 miles away in cities across the worldâs most populous country, where his ascent is both celebrated and criticized.
âWe have been denied the limelight for a long time,â said 48-year-old Gulfam Khan Hussain from the Indian city of Mumbai.
People in New York come out to support Zohran Mamdani, who won the mayoral election in New York Tuesday.
Andrea Renault/STAR MAX/AP Itâs âreally nice to see someone from the South Asian ⦠origin has come this far,â artist Tanya Lalwani said.
Mamdaniâs victory places him at the forefront of a global cohort of diaspora leaders who have shattered political ceilings in recent years.
In the US, Kamala Harris reached the second highest seat in government; across the Atlantic, Rishi Sunak became British Prime Minister, while Sadiq Khan secured the London mayoralty.
Leo Varadkar led Ireland and Humza Yousaf headed Scotlandâs government.
Related article New York City Mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani celebrates during an election night event at the Brooklyn Paramount Theater in Brooklyn, New York on November 4, 2025.
New Yorkers elected leftist Zohran Mamdani as their next mayor November 4, 2025 broadcasters projected, on a day of key local ballots across the country offering the first electoral judgement of Donald Trump's tumultuous second White House term.
(Photo by Angelina Katsanis / AFP) (Photo by ANGELINA KATSANIS/AFP via Getty Images) Angelina Katsanis/AFP/Getty Images The inside story of Zohran Mamdaniâs triumph and what happens next for New York Mamdaniâs win âreally brings the South Asian diaspora to the center of the conversation,â said Sangay Mishra, an associate professor of politics and international relations at Drew University.
But Mamdaniâs election also amplifies a central tenet of his political identity: his vocal criticism of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs government and its Hindu nationalist agenda.
âA blend of Uganda, India, Americaâ A three-term state assemblyman, Mamdani is a political embodiment of the district he serves: parts of Queens, one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse regions in New York City.
An immigrant from Uganda with Indian parents born in their homeland, he was first raised in post-apartheid Cape Town, South Africa, before his family settled in New York City.
Related video New York City Mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani celebrates during an election night event at the Brooklyn Paramount Theater in Brooklyn, New York on November 4, 2025.
New Yorkers elected leftist Zohran Mamdani as their next mayor November 4, 2025 broadcasters projected, on a day of key local ballots across the country offering the first electoral judgement of Donald Trump's tumultuous second White House term.
(Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP) (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images) ANGELA WEISS/AFP/AFP via Getty Images video Watch Zohran Mamdaniâs full speech after NYC Mayor win Mamdani is the son of Mahmood Mamdani, a renowned professor of post-colonial studies at Columbia University, and Mira Nair, the celebrated Indian filmmaker whose works like âMississippi Masala,â âThe Namesakeâ and âMonsoon Weddingâ explore the diaspora, displacement and identity.
He referenced this identity in his victory speech Tuesday.
âI am young, despite my best efforts to grow older.
I am Muslim.
I am a democratic socialist.
And most damning of all, I refuse to apologize for any of this,â he said.
Zohran Mamdani, center, walks through midtown Manhattan, New York, on September 29.
Victor J.
Blue/Bloomberg/Getty Images While speaking, Mamdani went into the archives of Indian history, quoting its first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.
He chose the iconic opening of Nehruâs âTryst with Destinyâ speech, delivered on the eve of Indiaâs independence from British rule.
And after finishing, the rebellious beat of âDhoom Machaleâ (which roughly translates to âMake Some Noiseâ) from the Bollywood blockbuster âDhoom,â began to play, prompting the room to erupt into thunderous applause.
âWhen Mamdani quoted (Nehru) he stirred some strings in our hearts,â Khan said.
âAnd Dhoom Machale?
What can I say?
Bollywood rocks.â Mamdaniâs rise as a grassroots democratic socialist assemblyman symbolizes the diasporaâs next chapter: a generation moving beyond integration to transform politics from within.
Related article New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani celebrates as he takes the stage at his election night watch party at the Brooklyn Paramount on November 4, 2025, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
Michael M.
Santiago/Getty Images âMamdani Mubarak!â: New Yorkâs South Asians celebrate the ascension of one of their own âIt means a lot that somebody who is a naturalized citizen and whose identity is a blend of Uganda, India, America ⦠who is also Muslim ⦠is poised to reshape the politics of the Democratic Party,â Mishra, the professor, said.
That Mamdaniâs political ascent also comes in the wake of a presidential administration that targets immigrants, crackdowns on H-1B visas, and conducts aggressive ICE raids, gives this moment âdeeper meaning for South Asians across generations and nationalities,â Mishra added.
âSouth Asians are going to be entering into political conversation in much more central ways.â Criticism of India As the leader of the USâ largest city and financial capital, any mayor of New York is given an outsized role on the world stage.
And with Mamdani, that role may clash with a government thousands of miles away.
A vocal critic of Indiaâs Modi and his ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Mamdani has condemned what he perceives as human rights abuses in his ancestral home.
He has criticized the BJPs Citizenship Amendment Act, a controversial law that critics say discriminates against Muslims by making faith a criterion for citizenship, and has disapproved the governmentâs 2019 revocation of Article 370 of the constitution, which had granted special autonomous status to the Muslim-majority region of Jammu and Kashmir.
Hindu Refugees from Pakistan and Afghanistan stage a protest against Congress Party over alleged Anti-CAA remarks near AICC headquarters in New Delhi, India, on March 15, 2024.
Raj K Raj/Hindustan Times/Getty Images He has called the Indian prime minister a âwar criminal,â in regard to Modiâs controversial role as Chief Minister of Gujarat during which a brutal wave of sectarian violence erupted in 2002.
Hindus blamed Muslims for setting fire to a train in an incident that killed dozens of Hindu pilgrims and sought revenge by attacking Muslim-owned homes and stores.
More than 1,000 people â mostly Muslims â were killed, according to government figures.
Related article India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi talks with U.S.
President Joe Biden as they arrive for the first working session of the G20 leaders summit in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, Tuesday, Nov.
15, 2022.
Sean Kilpatrick/AP/File How Modi went from being banned to embraced by the United States Allegations of state complicity were so severe that for years Modi was barred from entering the US.
He denied any wrongdoing, and the Supreme Court of India cleared him of complicity.
For many of Modiâs supporters, Mamdaniâs rhetoric is seen as a malicious attack on the countryâs majority religion.
âMamdani is a rabid liar,â wrote a BJP national spokesperson, Sanju Verma, on X.
âMamdani is Hinduphobic bigot.â Another BJP politician, Kangana Ranaut, said Mamdani âsounds more Pakistani than Indian,â referring to Indiaâs longtime rival.
âWhatever happened to his Hindu identity or bloodline and now he is ready to wipe out Hinduism,â she wrote.
However, plenty of Hindus disagree.
âZohran and his campaign have moved beyond symbolic representation of South Asian Americans to actually addressing the concerns that South Asian Americans raise,â said Ria Chakrabarty, Senior Policy Director for Hindus for Human Rights, a non-profit that advocates for civil rights in South Asia and North America.
The Hindu advocacy organization opposes Modiâs version of Hindu nationalism, believing it conflicts with the religionâs core values of pluralism and justice.
When a prominent American politician condemns events like the 2002 Gujarat riots, it directly empowers activists on the ground in India, Chakrabarty said.
Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi attends the India-UK CEO Forum at Jio World Convention Centre in Mumbai, Indai, on October 9.
Leon Neal/Reuters âThey know the Indian government is very responsive to international pressure, which permits activists to develop more tools that an international politician or journalist can use to exert pressure on the government,â she said.
Yet, on the ground in India, the mood has been harder to judge, though newspapers celebrated his victory with headlines about how he is New Yorkâs first mayor of Indian descent.
Related article New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, alongside his mayoral transition team, speaks during a news conference in the Queens borough of New York on Wednesday.
Timothy A.
Clary/AFP/Getty Images Zohran Mamdani announces an all-female leadership team for his transition including former FTC Chair Lina Khan For those who do know him, the optics are less about political pressure and more about simple, unadulterated pride.
This wave of joy was seen online, where some claimed his victory as Indiaâs own.
âWe are a country of leaders and Mamdaniâs win is another feather in Indiaâs already colorful cap,â said Khan from Mumbai.
âWhenever the challenge arises we give the world a Gandhi, a Sunak, a Mamdani ⦠And this is just the beginning.â Beritaâs Ayushi Shah contributed reporting from Mumbai.
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