As the synthetic whistle fades and the children’s choir sings “Anawa ah ah,” you realize Shakira didn’t just write a song for the 2010 World Cup. She wrote the anthem for the idea that joy is a universal language.
For the Colombian superstar, this was not theft; it was homage. “I wanted to do something that honored the continent,” Shakira said at the time. By sampling the Cameroonian classic, she turned a FIFA anthem into a pan-African celebration. The song features the original group’s member, Zangalewa, on vocals, creating a bridge between 1980s Central Africa and the global stage of 2010. It was the first World Cup anthem to explicitly center African rhythm and history—a fitting choice for the first time the tournament was held on African soil. If the audio is infectious, the music video is a masterclass in kinetic storytelling. Set in a township bursting with life, the video sees Shakira in a green army-style crop top, flanked by children performing high-energy choreography that blends traditional African dance with pop isolations. Shakira - Waka Waka -This Time for Africa- -The...
“Waka Waka” endures because it is the rare corporate sports anthem that feels organic—like a campfire song that accidentally conquered the world. It respects its source material, honors its host nation, and refuses to take itself too seriously. As the synthetic whistle fades and the children’s