- Whoever said that Niigata Prefecture is home the most beautiful women in Japan may need to think again. For the second year in the row, the Japanese representative for the Miss Universe competition hails from Nagasaki, with last year’s crown holder being Keiko Tsuji. As cool as that is, the real story of the year is that the 2015 representative, Ariana Miyamoto, is half Japanese.
It’s no surprise
that Western features are considered beautiful in Japan. Heck, some
women are actively seeking a foreign partner in order to produce
absolutely adorable “haafu” (half-Japanese) babies. Sometimes, due
to their alluring features, haafu
are not always treated the same, or even as Japanese, as their native
peers. Miss Nagasaki faced her fair share of race-related challenges too and
although some people are against her acting as a representative for Japan due
to her mixed heritage, she is also receiving a lot of support.
The final of the
18th Miss Universe Japan contest was held in Tokyo on March 8. As you’d
expect, Miss Nagasaki faced some tough competition of equally beautiful and
graceful young ladies, but it’d be a stretch to say that she didn’t stick out.
However, it really was only her looks that set her apart, being born and
raised in Japan, she is not only a Japanese citizen, but she identifies with
Japanese culture and considers herself Japanese.
Twenty-year-old
Ariana was born to a Japanese mother and an African-American father in
Sasebo, Nagasaki, the location of a major American naval base. After junior
high graduation in Sasebo, she spent her high school years studying in the US.
Upon returning to Japan as a young adult she set her sights
on becoming a model.
Working part-time
as a bartender, Ariana hesitantly entered the pageant scene, feeling
that with her “foreigner look,” she would never make it far. How wrong she was!
But
she’s not just a 173cm (5’6″) bombshell; Ariana is described as
a saishoku kenbi, “a woman blessed with both intelligence and
beauty.” Growing up in Japan, she is no stranger to Japanese culture and
even has a 5th degree mastery of Japanese calligraphy. She
lists her hobbies as cooking and “touring,” having obtained her motorcycle
license, a rare thing for a young woman in Japan.
In an interview
she revealed that the most influential person in her life is American pop-star
Mariah Carey
“She
went through a lot of difficulties before becoming a popular singing
sensation… She faced some racial hurdles, similar to myself, but she overcame
them and became a top star, so she’s been a big influence on me.”
It’s
wonderful that she has such a strong woman she can look up to, as well as
a lot of very supportive friends, fellow contestants and fans. But
unfortunately, not all Japanese people are excited about a half-Japanese
girl representing their country. Being a very homogenous society, some
people still have a time considering haafu as truly
Japanese.
Although this
should be a joyous occasion for the young beauty, Ariana is facing
challenges that no other Japanese Miss Universe contestant to date has had to
face, with those opposing Ariana voicing their dissent online with
statements such as “She has too much black blood in her to be Japanese.”
As sad as it is,
luckily, Ariana also has a very supportive fan base who are making an even
bigger impact on social media with praise and congratulations.
“Don’t lose to
discrimination and with a strong heart do your best to go win the Miss Universe
prize.”
“Having a different ethnicity in you doesn’t make you ANY LESS JAPANESE!”
“Having a different ethnicity in you doesn’t make you ANY LESS JAPANESE!”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bi1DLMmkoj0&t=23
Ariana
appreciates the support that helped her get to this point and promised, “The
world competition is going to be tough, but I’ll believe in myself and continue
doing me best!”
She has a long
road ahead of her before the Miss Universe pageant in January of next year. She
will be trained in walking, talking, make up, style and even physical training.
We would love for her to win the world competition, because who better to
represent the world (and universe) than a woman with a racially
diverse background? Good luck Ariana, you have our vote!
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