
Growing Pains: A Father and Daughter on Islamic Parenting in Japan
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School Rules
When Sarrah entered elementary school, Ali worked with administrators and teachers to provide an environment compatible with the needs of his daughter. This included allowing her to bring in side dishes from home when school lunches contained pork and to sit out swimming lessons on pool days to avoid being seen in a bathing suit. Art class was another area where understanding was needed. To avoid violating Islamic proscriptions against idolatry, Sarrah was excused from such artistic endeavors as drawing and sculpting animals and people. (The only portrait she made during six years of elementary school was one of Ali, for Father’s Day.)
The school’s staff took a positive attitude to Ali’s appeals and even introduced new rules that allowed Sarrah to interact with her classmates more freely, including permitting students to participate in swimming lessons in full-length outfits.
As an adolescent, Sarrah began to feel out of place at the meetings she attended with her father. Most of the participants, including many long-time friends, were devout Muslims, and she found it increasingly difficult to match their fervent study of Islam. A friend from India eventually noticed her lack of enthusiasm, and out of consideration for her and others at the gatherings suggested she stop attending rather than feeling obliged to go through the motions.
Balancing Two Cultures
While her friend’s words hit Sarrah like a bolt out of the blue, they helped her recognize why she had felt increasingly awkward at the meetings. Without mentioning the incident, she admitted to her father that it was not in her heart to be Muslim and that she would stop accompanying him to the gatherings. Ali respected his daughter’s decision and did not pursue the issue.
Sarrah says she might have converted to Islam had circumstances been different. “I love my father,” she declares, “but I grew up in Japan and many of the beliefs and facets of Islamic culture remain foreign to me. I’m used to the diet, but as a Japanese person it is hard to adopt many other aspects of the religion. If I’d learned to read the Koran or visited Mecca when I was younger I might feel different about becoming Muslim, but I’m too old now.”
Ali and Sarrah enjoy lunch together at home.
Growing up under Ali’s watchful but loving eye, Sarrah understands that Muslim men feel a strong obligation to protect the virtue of their wives and daughters. However, she also feels that limiting the freedom of women to move about society freely is out of step with Japanese culture.
“I appreciate my father’s concerns and that he wants to guard my dignity,” she explains, “but I can’t live like that. This is Japan, after all. I have just started my career and it makes no sense for me to hide away at home or don a hijab like I was living in a Muslim country.”
Giving Away the Bride
Although Sarrah’s words sting, Ali listens quietly to his daughter, seemingly resigned to her decision not to convert to Islam. He is aware, though, that a greater emotional challenge looms down the road: that of giving his daughter’s hand away in marriage. Ali realizes that if Sarrah chooses to wed, her suitor will most likely not be Muslim. Another troubling prospect is that Japanese wedding ceremonies frequently have Christian or Shintō themes.
Furrowing his brow, Ali admits that he is not yet ready to consider the idea. “I went against my parent’s wishes when I wed, so I have to respect her decision. For the time, though, I prefer to keep from thinking about it.”
Sarrah hopes to keep from worrying her father about possible marriage plans but is aware there are limitations. “Weddings are full of religious overtones,” she says. “I prefer to skip having one altogether for my father’s sake, although it’s hard to say what will happen if my future husband and his relatives insist on a ceremony.”
Although father and daughter do not see eye to eye on faith, the two are confident their relationship is strong enough to weather whatever issues may lie ahead.
(Originally published in Japanese on March 26, 2018, based on an interview by Yamaguchi Kazuomi of Power News. Photographs by Imamura Takuma. Banner photo: A commemorative father-daughter photograph taken for Sarrah’s Coming-of-Age Ceremony. Courtesy the Yousuf family.)