TOKYO,
October 20 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The scent and bliss
of the holy month of Ramadan in Muslim countries are usually clear and
obvious. To tiny Muslim communities in East Asia, however, Ramadan
makes them more conspicuous than ever.
Even
though Asia is home to some of the largest Muslim populations, in much
of east Asia the community is minuscule -- making Ramadan a special
occasion to affirm their identity and explain their faith, according
to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
In
these religiously diverse countries, Muslims seize the opportunity of
Ramadan to step up awareness drives to make certain they are not
associated with extremists.
Japanese
Muslims
The
some 10,000 Japanese Muslims do not usually have an independent way of
verifying the advent of the holy month, so they depend on other Muslim
countries like Malaysia.
According
to AFP Wednesday, October 20, Amir Arai, with the Japan Muslim
Association, was trying to sight Ramadan crescent from a top floor of
a Tokyo skyscraper.
But
it was cloudy, as is often the case in typhoon season. Arai, a
Japanese revert to Islam, had to seek guidance from authorities in
Malaysia, at 5,300 kilometers (3,300 miles) away, the closest Muslim
country, before he could inform Japan’s Muslims that the month of
prayer and fasting had begun.
Just
beyond the brash 24-hour youth culture of Tokyo’s Shibuya area, a
slender minaret lights up the night from a Turkish-designed mosque,
which during Ramadan is the meeting ground for iftar or dinners
to break the fast, AFP reported.
Most
worshipers at Tokyo’s main mosque are expatriates, as at most 10,000
Japanese are estimated to be Muslims, a majority of them women who
married into the faith.
Amir
Arai -- his given name was Takuro Arai -- reverted to Islam 40 years
ago in Tokyo where he studied Arabic and befriended his Egyptian and
Iraqi professors.
“I
felt at home in Islam. I found it a very welcoming religion,” Arai,
62, who sports a neatly trimmed gray goatee and walks around his
office in Japanese slippers, told AFP.
Arai
taught Islam to his wife, a Japanese who reverted, and used his
language skills for a career doing public relations for the Japan
National Oil Corporation in the Gulf, where he surprised many who
never imagined a Japanese Muslim.
When
he retired, he put his energy into the Japan Muslim Association where,
next to shelves that include the sole Japanese translation of the
Qur’an, he broke his fast with Middle Eastern tea and dates offered
along with Japanese sticky rice.
This
Ramadan marks the first anniversary of Sumiko Kimura becoming Fatima
Kimura after she wed a Pakistani she met as a volunteer teaching
Japanese to foreigners.
Kimura,
a 58-year-old cleaner at a library who would not stick out in a crowd
of Japanese women, said some of her first impressions of Islam came
after September 11, 2001.
“I
was frightened. I wondered what would make someone carry out suicide
bombings in New York,” she said.
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Students
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But
as she dug deeper into the newspapers, another image took over in her
mind: a haunting picture of Afghan resistance icon Ahmad Shah Masood
reading the Qur’an. Masood was killed two days before September 11.
“I
saw a very strong face of Islam. I was very impressed by the
enthusiasm Muslims show for their faith,” Kimura told AFP.
The
Japanese, in contrast to monotheistic cultures, often embrace more
than one religion simultaneously, participating in Buddhist, Shinto,
and Christian rites for different occasions.
“Some
people may be influenced by the media and think that Islam is about
terrorism, but most Japanese don’t have any religion and don’t
give others problems over theirs,” Kimura said.
A
trickier problem can arise with East Asia’s corporate culture, in
which workplace politics can be settled over alcohol - forbidden for
Muslims.
“If
you work in a company, the ethic is to succeed. If you work hard, not
drinking can be seen as just a small thing,” said Yumiko Nagai, 31,
who is half-Japanese and half-Indonesian and covers herself with a
headscarf.
Taiwan,
Hong Kong
But
a veil need not be a give-away for a Muslim in East Asia.
Kerimah
Pai Mei-ling goes to work every day in Taiwan in an Islamic scarf, or
hijab, but most people think she is in yuezi - a local custom
of women covering their heads for protection if they go outside within
a month of giving birth.
“People
shoot curious looks at me on the streets whenever I’m wearing the
hijab. When I take taxis, the drivers always ask if I’m in yuezi
and I explain to them that it’s my religion,” she told AFP.
In
Hong Kong, head-covered Cantonese Muslim Khadeejah Chiu said she has
been mistaken for a nun.
“People
would point at you on the street, out of curiosity, and wonder why a
nun looks so strange. They don’t understand what you are wearing
because hardly any Chinese dress like that,” she said.
Chiu
said she has heard stories of Muslims failing to find apartments and
jobs in Hong Kong.
“Normally
you work for Muslim companies or non-Islamic companies which are
usually foreign firms. They are usually more open to people with
different religious beliefs,” she said.
In
Taiwan, the 60,000-strong Islamic community -- much of which emigrated
from mainland China when the communists triumphed in 1949 -- is
looking for good publicity this Ramadan by holding a fund-raising fair
for an orphanage in Egypt.
Last
year during the holy month, Taiwanese Muslims helped bring an Iraqi
boy wounded in the war to the island for surgery.
“Many
people are prejudiced against us because they see Western media
portraying Muslims as militants and terrorists. There is very limited
understanding of our religion and customs here,” said Ma Shiao-chi,
head of the Taipei-based Islamic Association of China.
Korean
Muslims
The
beheading of a South Korean hostage in Iraq in June prompted tighter
security around mosques, but fears for the safety of the 35,000 Korean
Muslims proved unfounded.
“Though
a minority religious group here, we Korean Muslims have felt no sense
of repression or unfair treatment,” said Lee Ju-Ha of the Korea
Muslim Federation.