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Can Japan show the West how to live peacefully with Islam?

Aepsilons

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A piece of home: The multinational congregation at the Tokyo Camii attends Friday prayer.


Long ago, in another life, I went to a mosque in San Francisco to attend Friday prayer. More than the calling of Islam, it was a Libyan woman who beckoned me, and for the sake of family blessing, I considered a love conversion.

Enamored and clueless, I checked out the scene — an alabaster agnostic among dark-skinned and bearded believers, who eyed me wonderingly as we kneeled to pray.

Face down with my arms outstretched, my behind in the air and my nose smelling the prayer rug, I could feel that a prostration is a submission — a concession of smallness in front of a higher power. I could feel that as a humble servant to the only one god, Allah, you are no longer boss of the spectacle that is you. It was a gut-level challenge.

As I was leaving the mosque, saying goodbye to the regulars who had warmed to the newbie, I started liking these people and their humility. But with the exotic aroma of spices and the muezzin droning the Arabic verses, there was a sense of an alien reality. “If I get in too deep here,” I mused in private, “I might lose myself.”

The intrepid writer George Plimpton — who made a career out of ambling into otherness — once captured this bittersweet affirmation, leaving a football field to applause after a hapless trial with the Detroit Lions.

“The outsider did not belong,” Plimpton wrote about the amateur and his audience, “and there was comfort in that being proved.”

Like other projects enamored and clueless, my love conversion was later aborted.

Fast forward to Tokyo, the present. As this Saturday ushers in Ramadan, the monthlong fasting from dawn to dusk that is observed by Muslims worldwide, it has been striking to see Japan’s efforts to make this minority feel at home.

Some university cafeterias, hotels and restaurants now offer halal meal choices. There are Muslim tour guides, as well as prayer rooms at airports and companies — in addition to more than 100 Islamic associations. Even Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, at a Ramadan party last summer, assured foreign ambassadors of the “unbroken bond” between Japan and the Muslim world.

In part, the embrace is customer service. As relations with China went sour, Japan eased visa restrictions last year for Southeast Asian nations, to offset the lost business. This boosted tourism and student exchanges from Malaysia and Indonesia — the latter home to the largest Muslim population in the world — to the point that now more and more hijab headscarves are dotting Japan’s urban landscapes.

“Islam here is growing,” says Musa Omar, the executive director of the Islamic Center Japan in Ohara, Setagaya Ward, which first opened in 1963. He speaks with congenial authority, the kind of man who inspires you to read books and be a better, more spiritual person.

“We don’t recruit, but the mosques are full and each day people are coming to visit. Also, there are more conversions — many of them for marriage, both women and men.”

There is no reliable count of Muslims in Japan, allows Musa, but it now far exceeds 100,000. Having lived here for 40 years and served as the Sudanese ambassador, he thinks that the local community enjoys a unique idyll.

“There are no ties to our homeland politics,” says Musa. “At Japanese mosques there are no divisions, no problems between Sunnis and Shiites. The police here are on our side, and the people are open to Islam. Whatever prejudice they may have, they get from the West.”

Who would have thought: Japan, a utopia of pluralism?

Uniting a colorful mix of expats from Asia, Africa and the Middle East, removed from the context of sectarian strife and the historical Western interference still haunting many Muslim countries, could the Japanese brand of Islam be a showcase for its peaceful essence? Are the frictions between Muslims and the West based in part on identity posturing?

The Tokyo Camii, the largest mosque in Japan, built in a lavish Ottoman style, emerges from the Shinjuku skyline like something out of “Arabian Nights.” For the second Friday prayer in my life, I embedded myself there with 200 Muslims who had gathered for a sermon and food — perhaps the most multiethnic crowd anywhere in Japan (although the vast majority of the faithful are men).

The sermon, held in English and Japanese, exhorts the congregation to respect their parents. Later on, as people line up for rice and potatoes, the atmosphere is relaxed and clubby, a meet-and-greet among fellow immigrants. A visiting group of Japanese seniors is getting a tour of the mosque.

It feels different from Western environs, where Christianity and Islam are seen as the other’s Other. There is the fear of a Muslim planet — an immigrant force out-populating the natives, seeking to set up a caliphate governed by Islamic law. Afraid of a stealth ideology, conservatives such as the historian Sir Martin Gilbert warn that “the European idea is being subverted by Islamic hostility to the very ethics and values of Europe itself.” The message is picked up by politicians and media exploiting the Muslim bogeyman.

“The larger threat comes not from the immigrants themselves, but from our response to them,” Doug Saunders counters in his book “The Myth of the Muslim Tide: Do Immigrants Threaten the West?”

“These are clashes within civilizations, not between them,” Saunders writes, “and to a large extent they are products of the false belief, held by Muslims and non-Muslims alike, that the world is divided into fixed and irreconcilable civilizations.”

With an array of surprising facts, Saunders claims to show that most Muslim immigrants have no wish for Shariah law. Likewise, he writes, their fertility rates are actually decreasing as this diaspora adjusts to lifestyles and trends in the West.

Meanwhile, in Japan, no one frets over the Great Decline. Islamophobia is not an industry; the Other here is Chinese. The Japanese may be drawn to what they see as the pureness, the disciplined abnegation on display during Ramadan, yet unlike some in the West, they don’t appear to feel challenged by perceptions of superior spirituality.

“The Tokyo religion is fashion,” jokes Rahil Khan, 47, from Rawalpindi in Pakistan. A company owner with a swashbuckling air, he is a fixture in the Muslim community. Khan believes it is the social element that is attracting the Japanese.

“People are lonely at home,” muses Khan, “so they come to the mosque for company, for conversation and jokes. At the iftar (the shared breaking of the fast after sunset during Ramadan), many Japanese show up for free food. They follow Ramadan more than Islam — it’s like a festival.”

On a Saturday night, Khan takes me to my third mosque in Tokyo, on the outskirts of Asakusa. A prayer leader from Indonesia speaks to a group of Pakistanis and a Tunisian about the “Five Intentions to Read the Quran.”

The multinational setting leads to a comical misunderstanding, when the leader asks the group in English, “So why does the Quran have 30 juz (the Arabic word for ‘sections’)?” and Khan replies, perfectly sincere, “It is, like, orange juice for the 30 people. You know, they are thirsty.”

Being a Muslim means many things to many people in their very different lives. As for the evening prayer in Asakusa, it feels like a guys’ night out without booze — expats meeting with friends and connecting through things they would do back home.

But in Japan as well, the authorities are watching Islam. Government officers check the mosque in Asakusa, and the police keep an eye on Khan as he roams Shinagawa on business. One day, in decidedly un-Japanese fashion, he walked into a station and confronted the officers.

“I go inside and say, ‘What is the problem? Let us talk about this problem!’ If you need something, you should come and ask.”

No one says that diversity is easy, or even natural. A harmonious pluralism might need curiosity as well as indifference, both emblematic of how Japanese handle otherness. As for the showcase Muslim community, the alabaster agnostic is keeping his fingers crossed.


Can Japan show the West how to live peacefully with Islam? | The Japan Times

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As far as I remember Japan hasn't recently invaded any Muslim country, neither is it involved in toppling democratically elected governments in Muslim countries, neither has it been supporting and funding different extremists groups in Muslim countries. Why will there be conflict between Japan and the Muslim World? Muslims have a lot to learn from the innovation and the culture of the Japanese people.
 
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Muslims, Jews and Christians have coexisted in peace for centuries. If the west changes its interventionist foreign policy towards the Muslim world, there would be no problem.

They all coexist here as well. From the Muslim and Jewish immigrants I have had the chance to speak politics with, there would be issues between them even if the West disappeared tomorrow.
 
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Muslims, Jews and Christians have coexisted in peace for centuries. If the west changes its interventionist foreign policy towards the Muslim world, there would be no problem.

In Japan, it is very common for Shinto-Buddhist, Christian, Muslim to converse about the tenets of their religion, hear similarities, hear differences, and find agreement of some truths in each other's faiths. One aspect of Japanese culture that makes this possible is our concept of 'Kaizen' , which puts importance of hearing the other side out. Open dialogue.

I think a lot of Japanese people who are not adherents to any major abrahamic faiths find a sense of peace, acceptance to either Christianity or Islam because of the sense of community when one goes to a mosque, a church, bible study , or quran study group. And there are a lot of these.

In fact when I was in college, i used to attend a comparative religion book club , attended by Christian, Muslims, non-practicing Japanese and international students. It was in this club that i started studiyng into Islam, and the Q'uran and found a lot of beautiful similarities with Japanese culture. Namely the aspect of submission to a greater power, and humility. Plus, it is invaluable the amount of support one gets in prayer with believers. When you have a stressful work life, an active prayer life is really helpful (bioself feedback if you may) to relieve anxiety, intrapsychic tension.

:)
 
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The Muslim population in Japan is still infinitesimal, so there are no conclusions to be drawn from Japan's experience. When the Muslim population in Japan grows to represent 5-10% of the population, then we can discuss whether Japan can serve as a model.
 
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The Muslim population in Japan is still infinitesimal, so there are no conclusions to be drawn from Japan's experience. When the Muslim population in Japan grows to represent 5-10% of the population, then we can discuss whether Japan can serve as a model.

I think the writer was merely expressing the level of acceptance Japanese have with muslim adherents. Also, the scenario in Japan is devoid of terrorism and extremism , which many media outlets usually associate with Islam.
 
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I think the writer was merely expressing the level of acceptance Japanese have with muslim adherents. Also, the scenario in Japan is devoid of terrorism and extremism , which many media outlets usually associate with Islam.

The experience of the West is that it always starts out this way. In very small numbers, Muslim populations generally confine their needs to their own community, and otherwise, are an unobtrusive presence. The Western European experience has shown that once the population hits the 5%+ mark, things change. The Muslim community, having reached critical mass, begins to make itself apparent. Blocking off streets for prayer. Demanding the labeling of food as halal or non-halal, or demanding that all food served in schools be halal. Importing radical imams from unstable regions of the world. Referring to the citizens of their host countries as kuffar who must accept the rule of Islam (you can even find adherents to such beliefs here on defence.pk). After this special treatment is rebuffed, the alienation begins. The Muslim population demands to be treated differently, and then when it is, individual Muslims begin to wonder why they are looked at differently from other citizens. Instead of reversing course and assimilating, the alienation deepens, the extremism enters, and then comes the terrorism.

This has been the experience in Western Europe.

These social tensions are real, and the balance to accommodate religious belief with the requirement of assimilation for social stability is a difficult task. Japan is far from grappling with these issues, so it is of course very easy for Japan to be accepting, since Islam is still little more than a curiosity in Japan. Japan did not benefit from tolerance of Aum Shinrikyo, and long before that, the Japanese Red Army. The lesson will be learned again, it would seem.
 
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@LeveragedBuyout ,

I can empathize with your weariness , and note your case basis in Western Europe. In Western Europe, the states there have a very liberal policy of immigration and accept refugees from many parts of the world, including Africa, Middle East, and many of the refugees have little to no educational background or technical experience. So, their indifference to the host country may be caused by their economic depravity in their host countries, which then exacerbated by misunderstanding.

In JAPAN, we have a long history of muslim immigrants to the country , starting in the early 1980s, when muslims from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, and countries in the Middle East and North Africa came to find business and occupation opportunties in the country. This led to rather signfiicant and growing community, which helped to form a muslim identity in JAPAN. Most of the people who come to Japan from muslim countries -- are there for education, and for job opportunities. JAPAN is rather stringent in its immigration policies, importing individuals with a wide expertise in technical knowhow , educational background, and no history of criminal background. This is the reason why the Muslims in Japan do very well for themselves, earn considerable capital and are not dependent on the social welfare system that is seen in the case of Western Europe; per se Italy, France, Denmark, Sweden, Norway.

Also, the Aum Shinrikyo case was a cult , a violent one at that, and does not represent a wider religious community.

Thanks.
 
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@LeveragedBuyout ,

I can empathize with your weariness , and note your case basis in Western Europe. In Western Europe, the states there have a very liberal policy of immigration and accept refugees from many parts of the world, including Africa, Middle East, and many of the refugees have little to no educational background or technical experience. So, their indifference to the host country may be caused by their economic depravity in their host countries, which then exacerbated by misunderstanding.

In JAPAN, we have a long history of muslim immigrants to the country , starting in the early 1980s, when muslims from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, and countries in the Middle East and North Africa came to find business and occupation opportunties in the country. This led to rather signfiicant and growing community, which helped to form a muslim identity in JAPAN. Most of the people who come to Japan from muslim countries -- are there for education, and for job opportunities. JAPAN is rather stringent in its immigration policies, importing individuals with a wide expertise in technical knowhow , educational background, and no history of criminal background. This is the reason why the Muslims in Japan do very well for themselves, earn considerable capital and are not dependent on the social welfare system that is seen in the case of Western Europe; per se Italy, France, Denmark, Sweden, Norway.

Also, the Aum Shinrikyo case was a cult , a violent one at that, and does not represent a wider religious community.

Thanks.

1) Poverty and Low Education Don't Cause Terrorism
2) As long as Japan retains stringent immigration controls and naturalization requirements, it will never have a large Muslim population. In which case, we will not be able to draw any conclusions for how Japan can "live peacefully with Islam," because it's actually not doing so.
 
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