Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll was born on February 2, 1977, in Barranquilla, Colombia, the only child of William Mebarak Chadid, a Lebanese-American jeweler and writer, and Nidia del Carmen Ripoll Torrado, of Colombian and Spanish-Italian descent. She grew up in a mixed cultural household where Arabic belly dancing, Colombian vallenato music, and international pop were equally present — a cultural plurality that would eventually define the sonic world of her mature work. She began writing poetry at four and had composed her first rock song at eight. At fourteen, she was performing with a music executive who recognized her exceptional talent and signed her to Sony Music Colombia.
Her first two albums — Magia (1991) and Peligro (1993) — sold modestly and established her as a local Colombian talent. Sony considered dropping her before she demanded creative control over her third album, Pies Descalzos (1995), which she wrote, produced, and arranged. The album sold over five million copies and established her as one of the most important artists in Latin American popular music. Dónde Están los Ladrones? (1998) confirmed and expanded this position. Her crossover to English-language audiences, managed with deliberate care through the album Laundry Service (2001), was engineered by her collaboration with Emilio Estefan and produced 'Whenever Wherever' — a song whose distinctive sound combined her guitar, Middle Eastern melodic influences, and her then-unique hip-shaking dance vocabulary into something that had never been heard on American radio.
'Hips Don't Lie' (2006), featuring Wyclef Jean, became the best-selling single of 2006 and the most downloaded song in history at the time of its release. 'Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)' (2010), the official song of the FIFA World Cup, reached number one in over fifteen countries. Her Super Bowl LIV halftime performance (2020) alongside Jennifer Lopez, celebrating Latinx culture, was watched by 104 million Americans and became one of the most-discussed halftime performances in the event's history. Throughout this commercial success she has maintained the Barefoot Foundation, which has built schools in Colombia and other countries for children without access to education — an investment of both money and personal attention that reflects the INFJ's characteristic sense of responsibility to give back at scale.
Shakira's INFJ quality manifests in the emotional authenticity that runs beneath her commercial success: she has never given the impression of performing a public persona separate from her actual self, and her most celebrated songs — even the most commercially oriented — carry a quality of genuine personal feeling that distinguishes them from pure entertainment product. Her response to the public revelation of her partner Gerard Piqué's infidelity — channeled into the song 'BZRP Music Sessions, Vol. 53' with Bizarrap, which became the most-streamed song in Spotify history in its first twenty-four hours — was the INFJ's characteristic transmutation of personal pain into cultural expression: she made her private devastation into a shared experience that millions of people immediately recognized as their own.