Fortune | FORTUNE 08月18日
Zohran Mamdani met his wife on Hinge. Many American muslims meet their marriage partners in similar ways
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文章探讨了美国穆斯林群体在寻找伴侣和建立婚姻关系时所面临的独特挑战与普遍困境。从线上约会平台到现实生活中的相遇,再到热门真人秀节目《穆斯林红娘》中的真实案例,展现了穆斯林个体如何在信仰、文化、生活方式的多重考量下,平衡宗教要求与个人情感需求。文章还深入分析了“约会”与“追求”的界定、宗教虔诚度(halal-haram ratio)的评估,以及跨文化、跨种族婚姻可能遇到的阻碍,揭示了现代社会中穆斯林青年在追求爱情和婚姻过程中的复杂心路历程。

💍 线上平台与现实相遇:文章指出,Zohran Mamdani在Hinge上的成功以及《穆斯林红娘》等节目,反映了美国穆斯林寻找伴侣的多样化途径。从传统的家庭朋友介绍,到如今流行的约会App,再到穆斯林专属的交友平台,都为穆斯林群体提供了接触潜在伴侣的机会,但由于穆斯林人口相对分散,寻找合适的伴侣仍具挑战性。

⚖️ 信仰与生活方式的平衡:节目中的“halal-haram ratio”(清真-非清真比例)概念,旨在评估伴侣双方在宗教虔诚度和生活方式上的契合度。这体现了许多穆斯林在寻求婚姻时,不仅关注共同的信仰,也看重生活习惯、行为准则能否相互补充和协调,以期在现代社会中找到健康的平衡点。

💬 约会还是追求的界定:文章讨论了在穆斯林社区中,“约会”(dating)一词的含义可能与非穆斯林社区不同。一些穆斯林倾向于使用“追求”(courting)或“halal dating”(清真约会)等词汇,强调在婚前避免亲密接触,而是侧重于深入了解对方。这种界定反映了在保持宗教原则的同时,依然渴望建立情感连接的需求。

🌍 文化与种族的多样性挑战:美国穆斯林群体在种族和文化上极为多元,这使得婚姻选择更加复杂。文化差异可能导致关于婚姻习俗、财务责任等方面的分歧,部分家长也可能倾向于子女与同文化背景的人结婚。文章也提及,一些潜在的排斥并非源于宗教,而是带有种族偏见,这与更广泛的约会偏好和种族歧视问题息息相关。

💖 现代爱情的普遍追求:无论是否穆斯林,文章最后强调,现代社会中人们普遍渴望坠入爱河并建立婚姻关系,但这并非易事。穆斯林群体也不例外,他们在追求爱情的过程中,同样面临着“幽灵约会”(ghosting)、“爱情轰炸”(love bombing)等现代约会中的普遍困扰,以及来自家庭和社会的多重压力。

Nura Maznavi got a kick out of learning that New York City Muslim mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani met his wife on Hinge.

“It made me feel like less of a loser,” Maznavi said laughingly about meeting her own husband online more than 14 years ago, before apps like Hinge became a dating fixture for many people.

“He’s so cool,” she said of Mamdani. “Him and his wife are just so New York chic.”

Mamdani’s success on Hinge, as well as the show “Muslim Matchmaker” on Hulu, provide a glimpse into some of the ways American Muslims meet their spouses, from the traditional to the contemporary. Many navigate the quest for love and marriage while balancing their beliefs, levels of devoutness, diverse lifestyles and a range of cultural influences.

“We just wanted a realistic assessment of what’s going on in the love space for Muslim Americans and that we do have unique challenges, but we also have very universal challenges,” said Yasmin Elhady, one of two matchmakers on the reality series on Hulu. “We show up in ways that are complicated and joyful and dynamic.”

Maznavi, a self-described “sucker for romance,” co-edited two collections by American Muslims on love and relationships. She found that people met “through family, through friends, through sort of serendipitous meetings, through college, through work.”

Back when she was the one looking, Maznavi, a lawyer, writer and daughter of Sri Lankan immigrants, met people through her parents, friends and extended family.

Then living in San Francisco, she found the pool of Muslims small. Her mom heard a Match.com radio ad and suggested she try it.

“I still resisted,” Maznavi said. Eventually, she relented — and met her husband there.

Not as many fish in the sea

For Muslims seeking Muslims, “most of us are pretty few and far between and quite spread out,” said Hoda Abrahim, the show’s other matchmaker. ”You’re not gonna go to the gym and just be surrounded by people that you could potentially marry.”

That may mean having to try a long-distance relationship, she said. Many of her clients already used Muslim-specific and other dating apps, she said.

There’re also some in-person events for Muslim singles seeking marriage.

In the show, the matchmakers outline their “Rules of Three” — three meetings within three months and 300 compatibility questions to go through together. Their matched clients experience those first-meeting jitters, the warmth of a connection or the pain of rejection, and the uncertainty in between.

In assessing a couple’s compatibility, the matchmakers consider what they call the “halal-haram ratio,” referring to the level of religious observance and how a couple’s lifestyles would align.

One participant says she tries to perform the required daily prayers, but doesn’t “particularly dress very modestly.” She wants someone who’s open to the possibility of her faith growing and “who goes out” and “enjoys themselves, but … still follows the tenets of Islam — and trying to find a healthy balance of what that means.” (She’s also into good banter and concerts. Hairy men? Not so much).

Another participant says he wants a partner with “Islamic qualities” and has no strong preference on whether or not she wears the hijab.

“Many Muslims, even if they’re not a practicing, adherent Muslim, will have certain things that they’re very intense about: It could be the Ramadan practice. … It could be that they stay away from pork. It could be the clothing,” Elhady said. “There’s a really serious lifestyle choice that is associated with Islam and I think that in marriage, you are looking for someone to complement your style.”

According to a Pew Research Center 2023-2024 study, 60% of U.S. Muslim adults said religion was “very important” in their lives. That’s close to the 55% of U.S. Christians who said the same in the survey.

Abrahim said some online disliked the “halal-haram ratio” term, seeing it as normalizing “haram” behavior, meaning behavior that’s not religiously permitted. She pushes back. “We’re not normalizing it. We’re just saying obviously people practice to a certain level.”

Dating vs. courting

Then there’s the debate over what to call getting to know the other person: Is it dating? Courting?

“This is something we discussed a lot,” Abrahim said. “If I say ‘dating,’ I mean courting and we actually specified that on the show, like, we’re intentional and we’re serious.”

Elhady said there were so many positive responses to the show, but noted that some Muslims didn’t like the word “dating.” To that, she says: Make your own definition, or call it what you’d like. (Some use the term “halal dating.”)

“In their mind, dating is a word that was made for non-Muslims by non-Muslims and it means that there’s a physical relationship prior to commitment,” she said. “The show is not depicting people in premarital sex. … It’s depicting people searching for love.”

Among the questions that Kaiser Aslam gets asked by some of the students he serves as Muslim chaplain at the Center for Islamic Life at Rutgers University are: How to know if someone is compatible? And how to know them without getting intimate?

“In the Islamic tradition getting intimate, and sexually intimate is not allowed before marriage,” he said.

He suggests having serious conversations with accountability measures in place, like chaperones, meeting in relatively public places and clearly setting intentions “that you’re not trying to actually initiate intimacy or intimate contact, but you’re actually just trying to understand each other.” And, also, talking to the person’s friends and family, he said.

Marriage, faith and culture

Muslim Americans are vastly diverse — racially and ethnically.

“Young Muslims are finding people of different cultures over and over again, which is beautiful and great to see,” Aslam said.

For some, cultural differences can fuel “arguments of like, ‘No, we do marriage this way. No, in our tradition, the guy side pays for this. The girl side pays for this,’” said Aslam, who’s performed many marriages and provides premarital counseling.

Some parents object to their children marrying outside their culture, he said.

At times, there can be “racist underpinnings,” he said, adding: “We have to call it out for what it is. It’s not religious in any way, shape or form.” Theologically, he said, “we’re encouraged to make sure that the most diverse, good traditions have the ability of interacting with each other.”

Other times, he said, parents fear their children may be running away from their culture and need reassurance.

Tahirah Nailah Dean, who’s Black and Latina, said she’d encountered such barriers in her search, knowing that some potential matches were seeking to marry within their own culture and ethnicity. Some of her concerns also echo broader questions and debates beyond Muslim communities over racial preference and racial bias in dating.

Dean, an attorney who also writes about Muslim love and marriage, got married at 30 and later divorced.

In her 20s, she navigated the apps, but found dealing with such things as “ ghosting ” and “love bombing” emotionally draining. She tried matchmaking through the mosque and the “matchmaking aunties” as well as getting to know people through activities like volunteering at the mosque. She’d also asked friends to set her up.

Recently, she’s returned to the search.

Muslim or not, Elhady of the “Muslim Matchmaker” show argued, “people want to really fall in love — and it is hard to do in the modern age.”

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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穆斯林婚恋 美国穆斯林 约会文化 信仰与婚姻 文化多样性
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