|
|
File photo of a mosque in Japan
|
TOKYO,
July 16 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Although they make
up only a fraction of the country’s overall population, Muslims in
Japan move in earnest to give a true image and correct misconceptions
about their religion in what seems to be a battle of acceptance.
Imam
Cemil Ayaz makes it clear when he sits down for a chat about Islam in
Japan
: terrorism is not up for discussion.
In
fact, says the prayer leader and director of
Tokyo
's most prominent mosque, don't even mention the word.
"Islam
is a religion of peace and a religion of love," the Turkish imam
told Reuters in a report made by the news agency of Muslims in
Japan
.
Like
the imam, many Muslims in
Japan
struggle to disassociate their religion from images of militancy and
violence.
Although
they make up only a fraction of the nearly 2 million foreigners in
Japan
, the September 11 attacks,
Iraq
and claims that a suspected Al-Qaeda agent recently lived here have
intensified the focus on the Muslim community, and not in a good
light.
"Since
September 11, I think the attitude of people in how they look at
Muslims has changed," said Mohammad Zubair, a freelance
journalist who reports on the Islamic world for
Japan
's media.
Zubair
says his wife, a Japanese who reverted to Islam and now wears a
headscarf, often gets the cold-shoulder from her fellow Japanese.
"The
other (Japanese) women, they keep their distance, like she's someone
from another planet," he said.
It's
a familiar tale for
Japan
's Muslims, who number about 100,000 – more than 90 percent of whom
are not Japanese.
Media
To Blame
Part
of the problem, some say, is the media.
In
the wake of 9/11,
Japan
's media has paid more attention to followers of Islam, and not always
in a positive way, says Manami Yano, secretary general of the
Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan.
"You
hear a lot more being said about Muslims, people from the
Middle East
and Arabs," she said.
"For
example, on television there have been comments like 'there are a lot
of terrorists among Muslims and Arabs, so we should crack down hard on
them.'
"If
regular people hear that, they end up believing it. So it's no mystery
that people get stirred up," she said.
International
Group
The
country’s first Muslim community was established in the early 20th
century, when a small number of Central Asian Muslims, fleeing the
Bolshevik Revolution, took refuge in
Japan
.
In
the 1980s, as the country's economy boomed,
Japan
became a destination for foreigners seeking work, including Muslims.
Drawn
from such places as
Indonesia
,
Malaysia
,
Pakistan
,
Iran
,
Turkey
and several African nations, followers of Islam form an international
group in a nation that has long prided itself on homogeneity.
"(Muslim)
people have reached every corner of
Japan
," said, Abdul Rab Shaji, a founder of the Islamic Center
Japan
.
There
were few resources for Muslims when Shaji first came from
Pakistan
in the 1970s. He spent his first four years as a vegetarian because he
couldn't find halal meat.
Today,
he says, the country is home to about 25 permanent mosques, around 200
temporary ones and more than 100 Islamic organizations.
Stigmatization
Despite
advances, Islam still doesn't command the same respect that, for
example, Christianity does, says Kumiko Yagi, a professor of Islamic
Studies at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
The
misconception is blamed on stigmatization of the religion and its
followers, which Muslims complain lead to stigmatization.
"In
Japan
, Christianity is said to be a religion that loves peace," she
said. "But with Islam it is different ... Islam is associated
with underdeveloped countries and with war."
Some
Muslims say that association and linking Islam with the militant group
Al-Qaeda have also led to harassment.
Mohammad
Jassery, 38, says that before he was deported to
Pakistan
in 2003 for over-staying his visa, Japanese police grilled him. The
topic? Al-Qaeda.
"They
asked me if I belonged to the Taliban, if I belonged to
Al-Qaeda," he told Reuters in a phone interview.
Police
dispute the charge, saying that in an arrest for visa violation, the
police would normally ask about citizenship.
"(Questions
about the Taliban and Al-Qaeda) are not the kinds of things we would
normally ask," said Hidemi Shigeta, assistant chief of the
Tokyo
police station where Jassery said he was detained for three months.
Jassery,
who lived in
Japan
without a break from 1988 to 2003, is sticking to his version of
events.
"I
am very disheartened," he said. "What does it matter if I am
Muslim or Christian or Buddhist?"