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Ta Ra Rum Pum Af Somali May 2026

On YouTube and WhatsApp, a genre of fan-made videos exists where Bollywood scenes are redubbed with Somali poetry. A dramatic Shah Rukh Khan monologue might be replaced with a gabay about a lost camel. A fight scene might be set to dhaanto clapping rhythms. The title "Ta Ra Rum Pum Af Somali" would perfectly describe these videos—they take the visual and rhythmic skeleton of Hindi cinema and fill it with the soul of the Somali tongue.

Somali is also a language of oral rhythm. The classical gabay is performed in a meter so strict that a misplaced vowel can break the spell. Every line must begin with the same consonant sound (alliteration), creating a percussive, drum-like effect. Consider these lines from the poet Salaan Carrabey: Ta Ra Rum Pum Af Somali

The "Ta ra rum pum" is the beat of the engine—of the race car in the film, of the rickshaw in Mumbai, of the Toyota Hilux crossing the Kenyan border into Somalia. The "Af Somali" is the language of the passenger, telling a story about a lost cousin, a broken heart, or a hope for rain. Together, they form a new genre: diaspora drumming. On YouTube and WhatsApp, a genre of fan-made

In Eastleigh, Nairobi (known as "Little Mogadishu"), wedding DJs routinely mix Ta Ra Rum Pum with Qaraami (classic Somali love songs). A popular underground remix from 2018, circulating on TikTok, uses the "Ta ra rum pum" hook as a chorus, but the verses are in Af Somali —a lament about a lover who left for Dadaab refugee camp. The juxtaposition is jarring: a bubbly Hindi-film beat carrying a story of drought and displacement. But that is the point. The diaspora does not have the luxury of pure genres. It stitches together whatever is at hand. The title "Ta Ra Rum Pum Af Somali"

For a Somali ear, this is immediately familiar. Traditional Somali poetry and song rely heavily on curiyo (musical measures) that often use placeholder syllables like "Heedhe," "Waryaa," or elongated vowel modulations. The "Ta ra rum pum" functions like a dur (drumroll) in a dhaanto dance—it invites the body to move before the mind translates the words. In the diaspora, Bollywood films became a common language for children who lost fluency in Af Somali . They sang "Ta ra rum pum" before they could recite gabay (classical poems). Thus, the Bollywood rhythm became a scaffold: a neutral, cheerful beat onto which Somali lyrics could later be grafted. In contrast to the nonsensical drumbeat, Af Somali is a language of extreme precision. It is a Cushitic language spoken by over 20 million people, known for its alliterative poetry ( gabay , jiifto , geeraar ). A single Somali word can contain a universe. For example, "Gobannimo" means not just "heroism" but the specific dignity of a free person who chooses to give rather than take. "Xeer" is not just "law" but the unwritten, consensual social contract of nomadic pastoralists.