Islam in Japan

Love and Faith in Japan: Three Stories of Japanese-Muslim Matrimony

Society

The Muslim population in Japan is still relatively small, and most Japanese have only a basic understanding of Islam. Views of the religion are frequently tinted by stereotypes and negative images presented in the media, an issue that many Muslim residents and visitors find worrying. In this article we talk with three Japanese women who converted to Islam after marrying Muslim men.

Step by Step

Inside the offices of the Japan Halal Association, an NPO based in Osaka’s Hirano Ward, Khadija Mari mans the phones alongside a woman clad in a hijab. Mari met her husband, Abdurahman, while visiting Indonesia in 2012—he worked at the hotel where she was staying—and the couple wed on New Year’s Day, 2014.

Khadija Mari talks about her religious views.

Mari explains that she has slowly come to embrace Islam. “It was a gradual awakening,” she says. “My beliefs just naturally developed. Becoming a Muslim has helped me come to terms with different aspects of my life. I am now able to accept life’s challenges as the will of God.”

Mari admits she had concerns about Islam early in her relationship with her husband, but that he helped put her mind at ease by urging her from the outset to just have faith in God. When the couple visited his home village, Mari struggled with local religious customs and manners. Seeing this, Abdurahman consoled her, telling her take things slowly and give it time.

Shortly after the wedding Mari started wearing a blue hijab, but to her surprise Abdurahman found it odd and asked her to stop. Islam is often portrayed in the mass media as a strict, uncompromising religion, but Mari hopes the open acceptance her husband has for differing cultural norms will help others overcome these stereotypes and make Japan more hospitable to Muslims.

She understands that this will take time, though. She recalls how news of a terrorist attack saddened her husband and how he lamented the way it would affect people’s views of Islam. “There is a tendency to believe that Muslims are forgiving of extremist groups because they share the same faith,” she says. “Whenever possible, I let people know that this is not at all the case.”

Becoming Muslim

Mari (right) and Japan Halal Association President Remon Hitomi.

A colleague once told Abdurahman that in Japan a person’s religion is of no concern in the workplace. While Mari largely attributes this view to a general lack of understanding about Islam in Japan, she has also come to see it as astute advice for Muslims in the country. There are many challenges to living in Japan, not least of which is food. She says when out with coworkers, Abdurahman does his best to avoid eating forbidden items, sometimes even feigning stomach pains to fend off overzealous recommendations to try a dish. Such efforts can often leave him feeling emotionally drained, though. Shopping at convenience stores is also a challenge for her husband, who does not read Japanese well enough to check the ingredients.

“He tries to take everything in stride,” says Mari, “but even if he accidentally consumes something forbidden he still considers it a sin. When we’re together I have to remain on guard so that he doesn’t unwittingly break his vows.”

Now that more than three years have passed since Mari converted to Islam, she says her husband is finally starting to regard her as truly Muslim. He has even come around on the idea of her wearing a hijab, telling her recently that the head covering suits her.

next: A Willing Conversion

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