sulli

English

Etymology

From Punjabi ਸੁੱਲੀ (sullī) and then Punjabi ਸੁੱਲ (sulla), a mispronunciation of Punjabi ਮੁੱਲਾ (mullā, mullah, Islamic religious leader), derived from Classical Persian ملا (mullā), from Arabic مُلَّا (mullā)

The term became widely known after the exposé of 'Sulli Deals', an app and website that had taken publicly available pictures and private information of around 83 Muslim women from the Internet and created profiles to purportedly auction them.[1][2][3][4][5]

Noun

sulli (plural sullis)

  1. (South Asia, religious slur, ethnic slur) A Muslim woman; especially one from Pakistan.

Usage notes

  • The term is generally used by Hindutva supremacists.

Synonyms

See also

References

  1. “How dozens of Muslim women in India found themselves ‘for sale’ online”, in The Independent, 2021 July 18, retrieved 2021-07-20
  2. Mythreyee Ramesh (2021 July 5) “'Sulli Deals': How Photos of Muslim Women Were Misused On a GitHub App”, in TheQuint, retrieved 2021-07-20
  3. “‘It sends chills down my spine’: trolls sell Indian Muslim women at ‘auction’”, in South China Morning Post, 2021 July 10, retrieved 2021-07-20
  4. Asmita Bakshi (2021 July 20 (last accessed)) “‘We won’t shut up’: Muslim women put up ‘for auction’ in India”, in www.aljazeera.com
  5. “Open-source website targets Muslim women, uses their pics and names for ‘deal’”, in The News Minute, 2021 July 5, retrieved 2021-07-20
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