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This Rapper With Millions of Fans Loved Guns. Then He Was Shot Dead.

The world’s biggest democracy has one of the highest number of deaths by gun violence.
Pallavi Pundir
Jakarta, ID
India, gun violence, gun culture, sidhu moosewala, rapper, murder, shooting
Fans pay tribute to famous rapper-politician, Sidhu Moose Wala, who was shot dead on Sunday in the Indian state of Punjab. Photo: Narinder Nanu / AFP 

A 28-year-old rapper’s killing in broad daylight has put an Indian state on edge. Police are investigating the murder of Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu, popularly known as Sidhu Moose Wala, who was shot dead on Sunday in his hometown in Punjab state. Ten unidentified gunmen reportedly shot him at least 24 times while he was driving his car. 

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In 2020, Moose Wala was among the Guardian’s “best new artists” of the year. His genre-defining music combined traditional Punjabi music and hip-hop. His songs were political and took him into politics. He ran for a seat in Punjab’s Legislative Assembly last year, and was a prominent supporter of the Indian farmers’ 2020–2021 protests against the government’s controversial farm laws.

The world’s largest democracy has the second-highest number of firearms, the majority of which are illegal. Guns are intrinsically linked to Indian culture, where even revellers like to pull the trigger for a celebratory shot in the air. Punjab, Moose Wala’s home state, has one of India’s highest gun ownership rates, and the rapper himself often displayed guns in his music videos.  

Since the murder, state police has arrested five people and attributed the crime to a criminal gang. But Moose Wala’s family and supporters have demanded an independent investigation.

His father blamed government negligence for his murder, especially since the Punjab government had downsized the security cover of over 400 other VIPs, including Moose Wala’s. Hashtags such as #justiceforsidhumoosewala are gaining traction. 

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On Tuesday, as thousands thronged Moose Wala’s village for his funeral, chanting anti-Punjab government slogans and calling for death of his killers. As anger foments on the ground, Moose Wala’s music and its politics – which have divided people in India – are coming to the fore. 

India has the world’s fifth-highest number of deaths by gun violence, and Moose Wala has been labelled a “poster child” of glorifying gun culture through his music. Moose Wala’s love for guns was clear in his music. His 2021 song Me and My Girlfriend is about him and his “girlfriend” from Russia: the AK-47 he is holding throughout the video.

He is among several musicians in the region who faced crackdowns, including arrests, for displaying guns in music. Moose Wala himself faced a series of police cases for publicly using guns in 2020, but was never convicted. Later, he released a song where he referred to the police complaints as badges of honour. 

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India, gun violence, gun culture, sidhu moosewala, rapper, murder, shooting

Sidhu Moose Wala leaves behind a legacy of pathbreaking music with frequent displays of guns and a rebellious attitude. He was loved by millions of his fans. Photos: Sidhu Moose Wala / Facebook

Rajesh Gill, a sociology professor in the state-run Panjab University, told VICE World News that the “shocking and painful” news of Moose Wala’s murder is among many in India that highlight a culture of gun violence, popularised even more by music that glorifies guns. “Use of guns and violence, be it in songs or real life, shows toxic masculinity and patriarchy in the society, where such behaviour is celebrated,” she said. 

Gill also added that guns are seen as a caste and class status in India, along with power and privilege. Moose Wala often referred to his own dominant caste in his music too. 

“We as a society have developed an appetite for violence,” Gill added. “It’s reached a point where it doesn’t affect us so much.”

To his friends, family and fans, concerns of using weapons in music is misguided. Stalinveer, an Indian producer and Moose Wala’s friend, told The Indian Express that the criticism stems from a “western understanding” of how guns are used, like in the U.S. 

Jaskaran Sandhu, the co-founder of Baaz, a media outlet for the Sikh and Punjabi diaspora in Canada where Moose Wala started his career, called the criticism “unfair.” 

“His reference to weapons is often steeped in rebellion and a challenge to oppression, rather than senseless gang culture or violence.” Sandhu told VICE World News. 

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The criticism, he added, overshadows Moose Wala’s otherwise larger legacy. 

Official data shows that Punjab’s 28 million population have at least four times more weapons than even the Punjab police. India also has a history of anti-Sikh riots, which, Sandhu said, contributes to why Punjab has high gun ownership. “You can’t just look at [Moose Wala’s] songs and lyrics in isolation,” he added. “Weapons as a form of defence have a deep history in Punjabi and Sikh culture and customs.”

Fans are currently drawing the irony in Moose Wala’s last song, The Last Ride, which was released on May 15. It’s reportedly a tribute to Tupac, whom Moose Wala counted among his inspirations. Tupac was similarly shot dead in his car in 1996 at the age of 25. A part of the song’s lyrics says, “Everything is revealed in the eyes of the young boy/ That the funeral will take place in its youth.”

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