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Koyuki
Higashi is slim, articulate and intelligent, things that make a would-be wife
attractive to many in Japan. But Higashi knows she will probably never marry
because she is a lesbian.
Despite the
increasing tolerance of gay marriage in much of the developed world, especially
in Europe, and a gradual acceptance of the issue in more liberal states in the
US, the subject is not on the radar in Japan or in many parts of Asia.
But when
Barack Obama gingerly put his head above the election year parapet, announcing
he was in favor of same-sex marriage, it lit a spark of hope on the other side
of the Pacific in conservative Japan.
“Seeing the
US president expressing his support for same-sex couples was like being told it
was ok to be who we are,” said Higashi, 27.
“Everyone
now knows Obama supports same-sex marriage. The impact is so big, it’s
incomparable.”
Her
partner, 34-year-old Hiroko, who uses only one name, agreed.
“I was
really happy to see Obama use his starpower in that way,” she said.
Obama’s
pronouncement preceded a global campaign aimed at encouraging a stronger voice
for gay rights.
His
administration dispatched Mark Bromley, chair of advocacy group Council for Global
Equality, to Japan in June — gay pride month — where he told reporters equality
for same sex couples was an important tenet of human rights.
“[Hillary]
Clinton was very elegant in saying that minorities can never fully protect
themselves; minorities need majorities to find full protection and full
acceptance,” said Bromley, who has a 2-year-old daughter with his husband.
“That
requires laws and political support, and social space.”
‘Will of
the people’ not a priority
Homosexuals
in Japan welcomed the gesture, but, warned gay expat David Wagner, it was
likely to disappear into the void.
“I doubt it
will have much impact on other nations such as Japan where the will of the
people rarely takes priority,” said Wagner, who has lived in Japan for 25 years.
“Japan is
clearly more tolerant than many places,” he said, adding gays and lesbians in
Japan are unlikely to encounter outright hostility, something he puts down less
to acceptance than to a people who “are agnostic and tend to mix religions.”
But “tolerance
has limits in Japan,” he said.
A week
after Obama became the first sitting US president to back gay marriage, Higashi
scored a little victory for the lesbian, gay and bisexual community in Japan
when she confirmed with Tokyo Disneyland that same-sex couples could hold their
wedding ceremonies at the theme park.
But the
park warned that celebrations would have no legal standing because Japanese law
does not recognize same-sex partnerships.
Nor does it
recognize or give the same rights to any number of other family arrangements
long considered acceptable in some countries.
Under rules
that have changed little since World War II, married couples must use the same
surname and women are barred from remarrying within six months of their
divorce.
Any baby
born within 300 days of a divorce is automatically the former husband’s and
children born out of wedlock have far fewer rights to inherit than their
legitimate siblings.
Women can
marry at 16; men must wait until they are 18; one divorcing parent must
completely give up custody of their child, a rule that usually means an
estranged father all but disappears.
‘Imported’
debate
The
nation’s divorce rate began climbing in the 1960s, after decades in which about
70,000 couples terminated their marriage each year.
In 2011,
nearly 236,000 couples separated, according to welfare ministry statistics.
Around 660,000 couples tied the knot in that year.
Shuhei
Ninomiya, professor of law at Ritsumeikan University, said the imported debate
over gay marriage may help, in the long run, to provoke discussion over how the
family as an idea can adapt to the needs of 21st century Japan.
“The law is
not designed for divorcing parents to communicate and share child custody after
they separate,” he said. “Under the law, marital diversity is largely denied.
“Discrimination
against children born out of wedlock, stigmatizing them because of their
parents’ marital status, has been justified to protect legitimate marriage.”
“We need to
hear Obama’s support for same-sex couples as a broader message that forms of marriage
can be colorful and different for each couple.”
Hiroko said
the gay marriage debate was an important one for everyone in Japan, where the
pressure to conform to social norms is high.
“Both
majority and minority groups should join hands, otherwise we cannot hope to see
a change in the law,” she said.
Agence France-Presse

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