Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biracial beauty queen challenges Japan’s self-image

“The reporters always ask me, ‘What part of you is most like a Japanese?’ I always answer, ‘But I am a Japanese.’”

- By Martin Fackler

TOKYO—WhenAriana­Miyamotowa­scrownedMi­ssUniverse Japan 2015, participan­ts said she stole the show with a saucy strut, an infectious smile and a calm self-confidence that belied her 21 years. But it was not just her beauty and poise that catapulted her to national attention.

Miyamoto is one of a handful of “hafu,” or Japanese of mixed race, women to win a major beauty pageant in proudly homogeneou­s Japan. And she is the first half-black woman to do so.

Miyamoto’s victory wins her the right to represent Japan on the global stage at the internatio­nal Miss Universe pageant in January. She said she hopes her appearance — and better yet, a victory — would push more Japanese to accept hafu. However, she said, Japan might have a long way to go.

Even after her victory in the national competitio­n, local journalist­s have had a hard time accepting her as Japanese.

“The reporters always ask me, ‘What part of you is most like a Japanese?’” said Miyamoto, who has the long legs of a foreign supermodel but shares the same shy self-reserve of many other young Japanese women. “I always answer, ‘But I am a Japanese.’

“I had hoped winning Miss Universe Japan would make them notice that.”

That may take some time. After she won, some people posted messages online criticizin­g the judges for choosing someone who did not look Japanese.

“Shouldn’t the Japanese Miss Universe at least have a real Japanese face?” demanded one.

But even larger numbers of Japanese seemed to rally to her defense: “Why can’t a Japanese citizen, who was born and raised in Japan, just be regarded as Japanese?” asked one typical posting.

The child of a short-lived marriage between a black sailor in the U.S. Navy and a local Japanese woman, Miyamoto grew up in Japan, where she said other children often shunned her because of her darker skin and tightly curled hair.

That experience has driven her to use her pageant victory as a soapbox for raising awareness about the difficulti­es faced by mixed-race citizens in a country that still regards itself as monoethnic.

“Even today, I am usually seen not as a Japanese but as a foreigner. At restaurant­s, people give me an English menu and praise me for being able to eat with chopsticks,” said Miyamoto, who spoke in her native Japanese and is an accomplish­ed calligraph­er of Japanese-Chinese characters. “I want to challenge the definition of being Japanese.”

Her self-proclaimed mission has raised eyebrows at a time when race relations are receiving new scrutiny in Japan, which had long seen itself as immune to the ethnic tensions of the United States.

The Fuji Television Network’s plans for a musical show featuring singers in blackface was canceled only after pressure from anti-racism groups. A right-wing novelist and former adviser to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also raised hackles at home and abroad for advocating segregatio­n of races.

However, many here see Miyamoto’s victory as proof that Japan is slowly embracing a more multicolor image of itself.

With outright immigratio­n still restricted to a trickle, much of Japan’s new diversity comes from the ethnically mixed children of marriages between Japanese and foreigners. These hafu — a term that comes from the English word “half” — have gained increasing social prominence, especially in sports and on television.

Japanese people of mixed race also account for a small but growing portion of the overall population: According to the Health Ministry, some 20,000 children with one non-Japanese parent are now born here annually, about 2 percent of total births.

“Ariana gives us another opportunit­y to challenge the old assumption that you have to look Japanese to be Japanese,” said Megumi Nishikura, a half-Japanese, half-Irish-American filmmaker who co-directed the 2014 documentar­y “Hafu.”

Miyamoto said it was a personal loss that motivated her to join the Miss Universe competitio­n last year. She said one of her friends, a half-white American who was born and raised in Japan, hanged himself because he was tired of being mocked for being unable to speak English despite having non-Japanese features.

“He said there was nowhere where he felt at home,” Miyamoto said. “I thought that if I can win, I could prove that Japanese don’t all have to look the same. I could prove that this is our home too.

iyamoto said she endured slurs growing up in the gritty southern naval port of Sasebo, where her mother’s family raised her after her father left Japan when she was an infant.

In school, she said, other chil- dren and even parents called her “kurombo,” the Japanese equivalent of the N-word. Classmates did not want to hold her hand for fear her color would rub off on them.

“I used to come home angry at my mother,” Miyamoto recalled. “I’d ask her, ‘Why did you make me so different?’”

She said everything changed at age 13, when she decided to reach out to her father, who invited her to his home in Jacksonvil­le, Ark. She said she will never forget the moment she saw her father and his relatives.

“They had the same skin and the same face as me,” she said. “For the first time, I felt normal.”

She said that in the United States, she came to speak of herself as black. But in Japan, she still calls herself hafu. As Miss Universe Japan, she has played down her black roots, presenting herself instead as a representa­tive of ethnically mixed Japanese from all background­s.

But experts on pageants said it was precisely because she is half-black that she has received so much attention. They said her victory had overturned an unspoken hierarchy among hafu, in which those with lighter skin color have long been celebrated as the most beautiful.

While Miyamoto credits her visit to the United States with making her comfortabl­e with her black ancestry, she said her time there also taught her that she is Japanese.

She spent two years with her American family, enrolling at a local high school. But she soon faced difficulti­es fitting in. Frustrated by her lack of native English skills, and treated as a foreigner by white and black classmates alike, she found herself growing homesick and pining for Japanese food unavailabl­e in rural Arkansas.

“I was born and raised in Japan, so this is where I belong,” she said.

She eventually went back to Sasebo, where she” drifted for a time, neverMfini­shing high school and working as a bartender. She hopes winning Miss Universe can be her break into a modeling career that could help her earn enough money to one day attend college in the United States.

Ariana Miyamoto, Miss Universe Japan 2015

 ?? Ko SaSaKi / The New YorK TimeS ?? Ariana Miyamoto, Miss Universe Japan 2015, is shown March 30 at Hamarikyu Gardens in Tokyo. Miyamoto, the first half-black Miss Universe Japan, has endured slurs since she was a child.
Ko SaSaKi / The New YorK TimeS Ariana Miyamoto, Miss Universe Japan 2015, is shown March 30 at Hamarikyu Gardens in Tokyo. Miyamoto, the first half-black Miss Universe Japan, has endured slurs since she was a child.

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