Variant of Anaya, meaning 'God has answered' in Hebrew or 'care' and 'compassion' in Sanskrit.
Anaaya is a name of Sanskrit origin, rooted in the ancient linguistic tradition that gave the world some of its oldest spiritual literature. The Sanskrit prefix a- functions as a negation, and the root naya relates to difficulty, trouble, or constraint — so Anaaya carries the meaning of one who is "free from distress" or "without difficulty," a name that is in effect a blessing spoken over a child at the moment of naming.
This practice of embedding a wish or prayer into a name's meaning is a foundational feature of South Asian naming traditions. The name is used across Hindu and Sikh communities in India and among the global South Asian diaspora, where Sanskrit names have enjoyed a sustained revival as families seek names that honor ancestral culture while sounding graceful and accessible internationally. Anaaya's sound is immediately appealing across linguistic backgrounds: the doubled 'a' sounds give it an open, warm quality, and its three-syllable rhythm has a natural musicality. As Indian names have entered global naming conversations in the twenty-first century, Anaaya has found an audience well beyond its cultural origins.