buzzArab logo
Japan Arab Marriage
Why buzzArab?
Free. Don't ever pay to communicate with other users.
Responsive. Our users have suggested many of the new feature that we add on a regular basis.
Global. Users from Arab countries and Arab communities worldwide.
It Just Works. Register, Search, Chat, Match, Meet.
 
  Members in the US :  38,995
17,892 Members Online Now
 
 
By clicking above, you agree to the Terms of Use
    
 
BuzzArab provides the perfect platform for people from Japan and muslims looking for marriage. Hundreds of new people join every day, and our strict moderation process ensures that we limit the number of fake profiles and inactive profiles. Finding a marriage partner can be hard, but buzzArab makes it just a little easier.
Before choosing a marriage partner, ensure you're marrying the right person! buzzArab can help you in your search.
 
 
Everywhere
Arabs from around the world are on buzzArab. Meet Arabs locally near you or from your country of origin or someone.
Features
We're adding new features to buzzArab constantly, to ensure you always have a newer and better experience using our services.
Our Team
buzzArab is run by an enthusiastic team from the US, Canada, Morocco, Algeria and Egypt. We love what we do!
Chat for Free
No hidden payments or charges. Communicate with other users totally free.
 
The history of Islam in Japan began in the 1920s during the October Revolution with the arrival of several hundred of Turco-Tatar Muslim refugees who fled Russia and Central Asia.
In 1938 Muslims in Japan were estimated at less than 600, some Japanese also have converted to Islam through their contact with these newcomers.

In 2000, Keiko Sakurai announced in his book "Japan's Muslim Society" that Japanese Muslims numbered 63,552, foreign Muslims residing in Japan were estimated at 100,000.

In Japan, the Muslim community is mainly concentrated in the large urban cities such as Hiroshima, Kyoto, Nagoya, Osaka and Tokyo.

The writer Michael Penn estimates that 90% of Muslims are foreigners and that only 10% are Japanese.
Nevertheless, all these figures remain speculative because the Japanese government does not take religion into account in the demographic censuses for the sake of religious freedom, and does not record any statistics on the number of Muslims in Japan, whether being foreign residents or Japanese strain.

That being said the "Pew Research Center" estimates that in 2010 the Muslim community in the "land of the rising sun" counted 185,000 individuals.