Mansiya V. P.

Mansiya V. P. (born 1995) is an Indian dancer who specialises in the Bharatanatyam form of Indian classical dance. She has pursued her career in dancing, despite facing social ostracism by orthodox among both Muslims and Hindus on account of her dancing while being a non-Hindu.

In December 2022 Mansiya is elected as member of 26-member council of Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi.

Early life and education
Mansiya was born in 1995 in Velluvampuram, Malappuram, to Syed Alavikutty and Amina V. P.  She has an elder sister, Rubiya, who is also a dancer. During her childhood, Mansiya's father worked abroad in Saudi Arabia, but he supported his wife's interest in having his daughters study traditional dance. Alavikutty was not religious, though his wife was Muslim. When he returned to India, he worked in a travel agency. They raised their daughters with a non-conformist, secular outlook and were open-minded in ensuring that their daughters would receive exposure to varied religious traditions. The daughters studied the Quran in a Madrasah and were taught from both Hindu and Christian religious texts at home.

Both sisters attended public school and Veeran Haji High School. Rubiya went on to earn a post graduate degree from Annamalai University of Chidambaram and became a dance teacher. Mansiya completed her under-graduate studies at N.S.S College, Manjeri and went on to get a first division M.A. in Bharatnatyam from the University of Madras.

Dance
Despite difficult circumstances and acute social ostracism due to prevailing religious conservatism, both daughters were enrolled in Indian classical dance classes since age of three and encouraged to pursue and continue their dance career along with regular education. They studied various classical forms of Indian dances including Bharatnatyam, Kuchipudi, Mohiniyattam, Kerala Nadanam and Kathakali. Their teachers included Sarojini in Manjeri, RLV Anand, Bharatanjali Sasi, and Puthur Pramodh Das, among others. From 2005 to 2012, Mansiya regularly participated in the Kerala state school festivals (class VIII to XII) and won prizes for her Mohiniyattom performances. She was twice awarded the "Kalathilakam", an award for the best female performer, at the annual youth festival of the University of Calicut. She has experimented with choreographing a fusion of classical Bharatnatyam with traditional Sufi music.

Social ostracism
According to a report by Haritha John in The News Minute, the family was ostracized from the local community due to Islam being against public appearances by post puberty women. Stage performances are a taboo subject among conservative Kerala Muslim community and even the application of makeup for a dance performance is frowned upon. According to Megha Varier, the sister's father Alavikutty was already detested in their community for being a theatre artist and the family was shunned for not following Burkha. Varier says putting up with contesting questions by the daughters to Madrasah teachers exacerbated the situation. John says social ostracism in her Muslim community results in her and her family regularly being excluded from community public functions and events. Varier's report adds that there is a denial of social and financial help even during serious illness to any of their family members as the result of their secular lifestyle. John says the Mansiya and Rubiya sister duo have been attacked and faced abuses while walking on the road. Their own relatives and friends told them that they would end up in hell since they dance on the stage. The sisters faced neglect both at school and at the madrassa even from teachers who shunned them. As a result of all of this, the sisters had few friends. John adds that Mansiya even faced death threats while the community did not allow her mother Amina's burial because the sister duo perform Indian classical dances.

According to Manoj Viswanathan, while Mansiya's own Islam community ostracized her family, many Hindu temples, including the Guravayoor Temple and Koodalmanikyam Temple (Thrissur district Kerala), also declined dance performance opportunities for her because she refused to be confirmed as a Hindu and declared herself irreligious. Mansiya told temple authorities that she wanted to come, not for offering prayers but just to perform Bharatnatyam dance. However, many other Hindu temples allowed Mansiya to present her dance performances. Some politicians and dancers expressed their disappointment over some Hindu temples not giving performance opportunities to non-Hindu dancers.

According to Nikhila Henry, similar exclusionary practices were adopted by the church and temples in the case of Soumya Sukumaran, another Bharatanatyam dancer. Like many other Hindu temples that do not allow non-Hindu dancers to perform, Sukumaran's family's church shuns her for being a dancer.