Mata Granata, queer anarchist hip-hop musician & social worker

Podcast
Ženergija
  • Mata Granata, queer anarchist hip-hop musician & social worker
    60:00
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Natalia Gurova, multidisciplinary artist
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Suzon Fuks, multidisciplinary artivist
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Sara Ostertag, director and dramaturg
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Masimba Hwati, interdisciplinary artist
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Sunggu Hong & Ovidiu Anton, artists
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Kweku Okokroko, painter and writer
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Susana Ojeda & Emma Dirnhofer, activists & artists
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Negin Rezaie & Andreas Spiegl,the Library of Civil Disobedience
audio
1 hrs 00 sec
Isidora Ilić, doplgenger
audio
59:52 min
Khadija Zinnenburg Carroll, artist and historian, REPATRIATES

PRIDE Month Special Episode!
“Under every skin, there is the same struggle going on,” says Mata Granata.
In a time of growing differences, what still connects us? How does class struggle reveal the urgency of understanding the moment we’re living in?

This Pride Month, we’re not just celebrating identities—we’re confronting the systems that oppress them.
No PRIDE in deportation.
No PRIDE in genocide.

Ženergija are honored to welcome a powerful voice of resistance:
Mata Granata – queer anarchist hip-hop musician and social worker.

You need to hear this! Mata’s music is raw, political, deeply personal—hip-hop that speaks of rage, love, survival, and solidarity. It’s queer. It’s anarchist. It’s love!

Mata Granata was born and raised in Zadar, Croatia. As a teenager, he discovered punk music, which led him to anarchist ideas and activism. Since then, he has helped found various anarchist collectives and initiatives, including the Network of Anarcho-Syndicalists and the Center for Anarchist Studies.He was vice-editor of Spektar, a student-run magazine banned by the state after tackling nationalism. At university, Mata became involved in feminist and queer activism,  organizing the first events of their kind in postwar Zadar. After moving to Vienna, Mata began working as a social worker—first with underage refugees, and for the past eight years in a shelter for homeless single mothers, many of whom are survivors of gender-based violence. In 2020, he launched his solo music project as a hip-hop MC, calling it “class struggle and queer anarchist hip-hop.” Since 2017, he’s also been singing with the leftist choir Hor 29. November.

Website: https://cba.fro.at/podcast/zenergija
Facebook: Radio Ženergija
Instagram: @radiozenergija

Leave a Comment