Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Mixed-race model’s Miss Japan victory ‘refreshing’

- ELAINE LIES and SHIORI ITO

TOKYO: Ariana Miyamoto hadn’t planned to enter a Japanese beauty contest because she figured her multiracia­l origins meant she couldn’t win. Then a close multiracia­l friend committed suicide.

So Miyamoto, the daughter of a Japanese woman and an African-American man, whose bronze skin and height of 1.73m are unusual in Japan, where she was born and brought up, took part in the pageant and won, becoming Miss Japan.

“I thought that, for my friend’s sake, if there was something I could do to change Japan, I should,” Miyamoto, 20, a dual Japanese and US national, said.

“He always felt unaccepted by Japanese... and that made him unable to accept himself,” she added, in perfect Japanese.

Miyamoto’s selection last month as Japan’s representa­tive to the Miss Universe contest set off an internet firestorm, despite a push to welcome foreigners ahead of the 2020 Summer Olympics.

“That big mouth, that gaudy face. This is Miss Japan?” one social media commenter wrote. Another said she resembled an ant.

The carping was not new for Miyamoto, who attended a Japanese public school where children would refuse to touch her because “my colour might rub off,” she said. Fed up, she attended a US high school.

But the pull of her birthplace was too strong and she returned, though she said she is handed English menus and otherwise treated like a foreigner every day.

It’s a frustratio­n shared by a growing number of multiracia­l Japanese, who may look different in an extremely homogeneou­s nation. Some have won fame in entertainm­ent, but others lack acceptance.

In 2013, internatio­nal marriages made up 3.3 percent, government figures show, or four times the 1980 figure. Mixed race children were 1.9 percent of those born that year.

Miyamoto’s victory was “refreshing”, said Greg Dvorak, a researcher in Asian and Pacific culture and history at Hitotsubas­hi University, adding that Japan’s reputation as closed to diversity is overblown, despite instances of xenophobia.

“My sense is there is a growing shift among younger generation­s to accept that people with all faces can speak Japanese and function successful­ly in Japanese society,” he said. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? NEW PICTURE: Miss Universe Japan Ariana Miyamoto is reflected on mirrors as she works out at a gym in Tokyo.
PICTURE: REUTERS NEW PICTURE: Miss Universe Japan Ariana Miyamoto is reflected on mirrors as she works out at a gym in Tokyo.

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