Arabic name meaning gift or guide, from a root connected with giving and right guidance.
Hadiya is an Arabic name of grace and purpose, derived from the root h-d-y, which carries the meanings of "gift," "guide," and "righteous guidance." In Islamic tradition, the concept of huda — guidance toward what is good and true — is among the most cherished spiritual values, and Hadiya shares its root with that concept, making it a name imbued with both material generosity (a gift bestowed) and moral aspiration (one who guides others toward righteousness). The name is used widely across Arabic-speaking countries, as well as in Muslim communities in East Africa, South Asia, and the diaspora worldwide.
In the Swahili-speaking cultures of East Africa, Hadiya is particularly beloved, fitting naturally into the naming traditions of Somalia, Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Kenya, where Arabic-derived names have been woven into local culture through centuries of Islamic scholarship and trade. The name also belongs to the Hadiya people of southern Ethiopia, an ethnic group with a rich oral literary tradition, lending the name an additional layer of identity and place. In the contemporary West, Hadiya gained heartbreaking visibility in 2013 when fifteen-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, a majorette who had performed at President Obama's inauguration, was shot and killed in Chicago — a tragedy that became a focal point for conversations about gun violence and the loss of young Black lives.
Her name, which means gift, became synonymous with a life cut unjustly short, and for many families, choosing Hadiya is a quiet act of remembrance and hope. Today the name is recognized for its beauty, its depth, and the worlds it carries within it: devotion, generosity, and the aspiration to light the way.