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Mursal grew up in a Muslim family with four daughters. As a teenager, she broke tradition and began singing professionally in Mogadishu. She performed in nightclubs and her brand of music, featuring a mix of blues, soul African and Arabic influences, and known as "Somali jazz", became popular across the country. She performed solo and with Waaberi a 300-member music and dance troupe associated with the Somalian National Theatre. After criticizing the government, she was banned from singing for two years, and made her living driving a taxi.
During the civil war in her homeland, she and her five children undertook an arduous seven-month journey across four countries on foot and by hitchhiking to finally reach safety in Djibouti, where she found asylum in the Danish embassy. It was this odyssey that provided the germ of her solo recording The Journey, with guitars, sequencers and back-up vocals from Peter Gabriel.
Mursal is an exile, now residing in Denmark. She converted to Christianity in 1996, but in a 2001 interview expressed Muslim sympathies. She has toured Europe with Waaberi and appeared with Nina Simone. Her work has been produced by Peter Gabriel's Real World record label.