Omar Offendum

Omar Offendum is a Syrian American hip-hop artist, designer, poet and peace activist. He was born in Saudi Arabia, raised in Washington, DC, and now lives in Los Angeles, California. He tours the world performing internationally at music festivals, lecturing at major academic institutions and fundraising for humanitarian relief organizations. Most recently Offendum has been involved in creating several critically acclaimed songs about the popular democratic uprisings throughout the Middle East & North Africa. He is also working on several new collaborative projects while touring to promote his solo work.

Omar Offendum
BornDecember 18, 1981
Saudi Arabia
NationalitySyrian American
EducationUniversity of Virginia, School of Architecture
OccupationHip Hop Artist

Biography

Omar Offendum was born in Saudi Arabia and raised in Washington, D.C. where he attended the Islamic Saudi Academy. He graduated as valedictorian of his class in 1999 and went on to attend the University of Virginia School of Architecture. After graduating on the Dean's list in 2003, he moved to Los Angeles, California where he worked at an architecture firm for 10 years while simultaneously establishing his musical career.

Early career

It was at UVA that Offendum began his career as part of The N.O.M.A.D.S duo, with Sudanese-American rapper Mr Tibbz. After moving to Los Angeles, Offendum started collaborating with the Palestinian-Filipino hip-hop trio The Phillistines. They worked to create Free the Pa compilation of hip-hop and spoken word dedicated to the youth of Palestine featuring artists from all over the world – which was the first Arab American rap record to receive national distribution (Ryko Warner). Offendum then began working with Iraqi-Canadian rapper Narcy and co-produced the Arab Summit album. He also co-authored the Brooklyn Beats to Beirut Streets performance lecture with HBO Def poet Mark Gonzalez.

Solo career

Omar Offendum's song #Jan25, inspired by the Arab Spring uprisings in Egypt, became popular in 2011. It went viral via the internet, which Offendum sees as a key factor in the spread of international hip-hop.[1] It was released in February 2011, shortly before the resignation of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.[2]

Omar Offendum has often collaborated with Yassin Alsalman also known as Narcy and Shadia Mansour, "the first lady of Arabic hip hop."[3][4]

Discography

His first solo album, SyrianamericanA was released in 2011.[2]

Offendum released "Close My Eyes" , a reflection on fatherhood and immigration [5]

gollark: Although that probably wouldn't be great because you want to protect people from attaining doublespent coins anyway.
gollark: You don't know which one was first.
gollark: But if two people get whatever you need to make the proof, you have apioforms because without a blockchain you can't timestamp them properly.
gollark: I mean, you could probably devise something where when someone gets a coin, they can publish a proof that they... got the coin.
gollark: I feel like that might just end up needing the entire blockchain thing you attempted to avoid?

References

  1. Cora Currier. "Soundtrack for a Revolution". The European. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  2. Julia Pyper. "Omar Offendum: #Jan25 - A Soundtrack of the Revolution". The New Significance. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  3. Donnison, Jon. "British Palestinian rapper conducts a 'musical intifada'".
  4. "Middle East Hip Hop Diplomacy".
  5. "Close My Eyes, by Omar Offendum". Omar Offendum. Retrieved 2019-09-18.
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