While headlines celebrate New York’s new mayor, another story is quietly stealing hearts — that of his wife, Rama Duwaji.
When Zohran Mamdani, just 34, made history as the city’s first Muslim and South Asian mayor, few expected his gentle, soft-spoken artist wife to become the public’s new fascination. Yet overnight, her calm grace and quiet creativity turned her into the city’s most intriguing mystery.
Born in the U.S. to Syrian parents, Rama grew up between two worlds. Her art — delicate, thoughtful, and deeply human — explores identity, memory, and sisterhood. From The New Yorker to Tate Modern, her work has already touched lives far beyond Brooklyn. “Cooking together, painting together — that’s how I find belonging,” she once said.
She met Zohran on Hinge in 2021 — a modern love story that led to a courthouse wedding and, now, to history. Yet despite the attention, Rama has chosen quiet over fame. “She’s our modern-day Princess Diana,” said one friend.

Social media can’t stop talking about her poise, her warmth, her eyes that “speak kindness.” But to those who know her, Rama Duwaji is more than a First Lady — she’s a reminder that art and compassion still have a place in politics.
And perhaps, that’s the kind of beauty New York needs most right now.
