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Aug 07

Press Hit: Queen YoNasDa is Hop Hop Diva’s Underground Artist of the Week

Rapper @QueenYoNasDa is Hip Hop Diva’s “Diva of the Week”

Queen YoNasDa is Hip Hop Diva’s “Underground Diva of the Week.” The online community for female rappers describes Queen YoNasDa as an uplifting, inspirational and sexy activist.

HHD (THEHIPHOPDIVA): You started in the entertainment industry as a choreographer. Why did you decide to transition to a hip hop artist?

QY (Queen YoNasDa): I started dancing on BET Teen Summit, Planet Groove, Soul Train, and I even danced and choreographed for a couple of videos, but once the wave of the video vixen came in and I was a trained dancer and I didn’t see the need of me in that part of the business. I grew up as a huge hip hop head. I engulfed myself with all aspects of hip hop from djing, graff writing, to emceeing. When I was doing the open mic circuit with a friend of mine, Sidestreet Ked from Dungeon Family was like you need to tell your story and do this rap thing professionally and that’s when I did.

HHD: Your music is very personal and you often speak of struggles that you’ve endured. What are some of those struggles that have made you who you are today?

QY: Well, I was born into the struggle. My mother was an activist and my father was a fine artist but also in and out of prison all my life. My mother was full-blooded Native American and she used to work for Muhammad Ali. She had me during the American Indian Movement’s Longest Walk. So I was born into a huge historic protest. I was the only girl born during this protest in Washington D.C. There was a time she was on the run from the Feds so we moved around a lot and we eventually settled in Arizona, but she ended up having to serve time and that’s when the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan adopted my brother and I. But through my years, I went through it all from losing my mother to lung cancer, to being homeless, to being in abusive relationships, to having a son out-of-wedlock to the struggles of being a female in the music business. But I look at it now and I am blessed and that blessing has made me able to share it and show anyone that no matter what you’re going through God got this!! He is the one that got a master plan at the end of the day. And even though we may be in darkness and not even see no glimpse of light, pain may endure for a night but the sun shines in the morning.

HHD: I would think that as the granddaughter of Minister Louis Farrakhan there was some pressure to live your life a certain way. Did you experience any pressure from your family and if so what direction were they pushing you to go?

QY: No not at all. Even when I wanted to do things that were against the way I was brought up I must say the people that were maybe dealing drugs or stripping were like ‘No you have too much to do and represent,” and they wouldn’t let me. It was crazy, they wouldn’t let me engulf myself in their lifestyles because of the amount of respect they had for my grandfather and my mother. And I must say, Minister Farrakhan is not just only a father figure to me but also a best friend and someone I went to on everything. He accepted me for who I was regardless. I came to him after I had my son, which was hard because I thought I let him down, but he understood. I was terrified when I let him hear my music, I was really wanting his approval, but he loved it. My uncle told me the other day that your mother and Farrakhan are instilled enough in you that you know what to do and what not to do. And I love them both for it because they gave room for God to do what HE needed to do, and that’s the best way to raise a child.

Click here for Queen YoNasDa’s full interview with TheHipHopDiva.com.

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