Thursday, 22 November 2018

Why millions of Muslims are signing up for online dating

By Lydia Green ~ BBC Arabic

Arranged marriages are standard practice in many societies, but the introductions and screening process can be an ordeal for the young people involved - even if they are pleased with the eventual outcome. Some Western Muslims have concluded that online matchmaking can help reduce embarrassment.


"You don't like her? Why not? She got two legs, she got two arms, she's a professional. How can you not like her?"

Adeem Younis remembers all too well the trials of his family-orchestrated matchmaking. "Someone would be brought round for an evening meal and it was a really big deal. The samosas came out and the chicken and the chapattis… It was so highly pressurised."

Along with others in Europe and the US, Younis began looking for samosa-free ways to help young Muslims tie the knot, and Muslim online matchmaking was born.

Sometime in the last decade or so, online dating became a mainstream activity, in Europe and North America at least. These days everyone is at it, from the likes of Halle Berry and Adele - both say they have given it a go - to your aunt, my grandmother, and half the people swinging like coat hangers on the early morning commute.

So perhaps it's not surprising that Western Muslims adapted the idea to their needs. For many, online dating offers a low-stress solution to the daunting challenge of finding a partner for marriage in countries where few share their faith, and in communities where matchmaking is considered a family affair.

Adeem Younis encourages people to involve their families in an online search
Younis's own matchmaking site, SingleMuslim.com, which he founded above a fast-food shop in Wakefield while still a lowly undergraduate, now boasts more than a million members.

However, as the young entrepreneur tells me, to call the practice "Muslim online dating" would be inaccurate. The goal of such sites is often far more ambitious than the average hook-up website. Instead of hazy morning-after memories and hopes of receiving a follow-through text message, sites like SingleMuslim.com aim to provide clients with a partner for life. It is a responsibility not to be taken lightly.

"In Islam, marriage is equal to half of your religion," he says, quoting a saying thought to have been uttered by the Prophet Mohammed, "so you can imagine how important it is… Islam teaches us that marriage is the cornerstone of society as a whole."

SingleMuslim.com now claims a success rate of about four matches per day. But the site is just one example of a booming market serving Muslims of all ages and degrees of religiosity.

For example, there is Muslimmatrimony.com, which allows members to search for partners not only by sect, but by the particular doctrine of Islam that they follow and the languages they speak.

Another, HipsterShaadi.com used to market itself as the site for people looking for a partner with whom to "write poetry and dance in the rain" but of whom their parents will also approve. It has now changed its name to ishqr.com and says it is the place for feminists looking for a "bold, humble, feminist brother or a Rumi-and-granola-loving Muslim".

Muhammad and Catherine with their first child
Muhammad met his wife Catherine through an online matchmaking site four years ago. Today he is happily married with two children. But his search for marital bliss wasn't always an easy ride.

"There isn't that scope to meet people," he says. "Devout Muslims don't go pubbing and clubbing. In typical Western cultures that's OK, but in Muslim culture it's frowned upon. So there are very few avenues, apart from family contact, for matchmaking to occur."

Muhammad had been on various secular dating websites before he decided to give Muslim online matchmaking a try.

"It was round about Easter 2010 when I first emailed Catherine," he recollects. "Things escalated very, very rapidly. Three or four months from initial contact we got married - we just knew really. When you meet the right person, you know."

Muhammad, who is of Bangladeshi origin, and Catherine, who is British and converted to Islam at university, may seem like an unusual couple, but in many ways their relationship exemplifies the kind of relationships that these websites seek to endorse.

"The identity of global Islam is not physical, it's more ideological - its constituency is a global constituency," says Mbaye Lo, professor of Arabic at Duke University and author of an academic paper titled Muslim Marriage Goes Online.

"That is why the websites often show an African Muslim man with an Indo-Pakistani girl, for example, on their main page. They portray themselves in a physical manner that postulates Islam's globality in order to engage people on a global level and give them more of a global outlook, a global citizenship."

According to Lo, the websites not only encourage global citizenship, they also allow young people in conservative countries to choose potential matches with greater freedom. "The status quo in many countries doesn't always favour women in making choices - the internet makes meeting easier culturally," he says.


Riad, who hails from the Tunisian capital Tunis, met his wife online in 2012. "I fell in love with her the moment I saw her," he recollects, "a real coup de foudre".

However, like many in the Middle East and North Africa, he has reservations about online dating. Despite his own positive experience, he would not necessarily recommend it to others. "The virtual world is a world of lies," he warns, "you just don't know who you are talking to."

Unlike in the West, where Muslim online matchmaking often appeals to young people with a strong religious identity, in Tunisia, Riad tells me, the opposite is true.

"Very religious families would prefer that their children meet future partners in the traditional ways, through the family. They take the view that meeting a partner online isn't natural and they are therefore very suspicious."

In the West, however, the industry is booming. Younis, who set up SingleMuslim.com in 2000, never imagined it would turn into a full-time career.

However, 14 years on, the website has given him more than one thing to be proud of. A few years after setting up the site, the young entrepreneur found a wife of his own online. He is now a proud father of four, his last child, a healthy little girl, having been born while this article was being written.

Taken from HERE.

9 comments:

  1. Online dating is not always a bad perspective in which a lot of people will say that it is not good because its only in social media and we don’t meet them physically. Online dating or the web that provides the dating relation is actually a way in which people can find their true love or partners. This type of activity has been criticized by a lot of people and also government because this kind of dating can spread rumors, hoax, and also dangerous thought. I also wonder if sometimes how this media can be successful in making relation of one people to another because in this case we contact them only with chat and it also makes the relation don’t have a really good benefits for both of the people in the future. On the other hand, there’s also a prove in which Muslims in USA find their true love through this social media.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I don't particularly agree with this, my reasoning for that is because in Islam the concept of marriage is seen as a ritual involving the extended family for both the groom and bride, for example in Indonesia, proposing for marriage to a bride is not the standard kneeling down on one knee and showing a ring, the process usually takes a lot of time and involves the agreement of both parents from both sides and the proposition it self is usually conducted as a formal meeting between the groom-to-be and the father of the bride. This seems like it skips almost all of those steps and instead goes right into the marriage itself, a sort of practice rarely seen, if at all, in Indonesia. But I can't disagree on this type of conduct outside of Indonesia, as I know almost nothing on how marriage proposals work for the Muslims living in the western world, specifically the united states.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I suppose for millions of Muslims to be signing up for an online dating site is perfectly normal, as Muslims are people too; and the age of internet is available for everyone. I have seen this specific online dating site before and to be honest they are quite legit, and for Muslims who are living in an area where they are a minority this kind of site would be pretty useful, as it is quite difficult to find a Muslim partner. Yet, there is another barrier in getting married within the Muslim world, ethnicity; for people in the western world would think that all Muslim are the same; and the reality is quite the opposite. As most Muslims comes from a culture in which prioritize getting married to someone from the same kin. These cases also create ethnic specified dating site, for example arablounge.com, etc. So at the end of the day it is perfectly normal for people to sing up on an online dating site.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Millions of Muslims are signing up for online dating is as normal as people who do not adhere to Islam signing up for online dating, as online dating do not only performed by a particular adherent or believes. I have no objection to online dating; hence it is an unharming activity. However, I refuse to sign such a medium to find a partner. I took personal relationship heartily, as I do not want a short-term relationship, and I value love as a precious emotional and mental state. Moreover, I have scepticism in virtue of virtual-originated romantic affairs, by the result of not knowing the other actor exponentially. I believe in the prominence of understanding the possible future partner before performing a sublime interpersonal affection with the partner. It is a matter of perspective, however, and it did not have to be completed in the same manner as mine, let alone in the frame of eloquent.

    ReplyDelete
  5. As we are now living in the twenty first century it can be said that many and various aspects of life are affected. Whether it is the challenge to face with daily tasks at home, to dealing with our office work and personal problems. With the progression of technology in our current era, it has also taken the role of finding potential "significant other" for many people all around the world through an app. With the rising popularity of the online dating app, it is not only available to contemporary users but now specifies more to a certain religion or sect for example. In my opinion it is the individual's own choice to use the personal dating app to find a partner. Because everyone has each of their own circumstances. But personally I prefer to look for someone who is in my life, because I see that as a much more natural process of finding someone you want to be with. Rather than forcing it through an app in which the occurrence of the relationship seems artificial for me.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Finding a partner who truly matches you is now easier with the help of online dating. I am not against anyone who utilizes the internet in how easy it is to access information about their future partner. We’ve seen many cases where people are stuck in arranged marriages because they simply can’t find a compatible partner because of ethnicity differences. Specific segmented online dating sites like this might be the perfect solution. I agree on seeing how being a minority may put you in a certain area may put certain people in difficult situations such as finding people to be involved with for long term commitments like marriages. Between family pressure or personal preference, the two can’t usually put side by side. Also, seeing on the bright side, muslims are usually strict with physical contact between opposite sex as they are considered ‘zinah’ so getting to know people through the internet may limit that probability.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Muslims usually seen as people that follows what the religion told them to do without adjusting it with the situation and the condition in today’s world. Initially Muslims in accordance to the original teaching from god to the Muslims through their prophets, as a Muslims we are suggested not to do dating or any type of human undertaking relationship between men and women which is not bounded with a blood relation or family relation. The initial purpose of this rule is to prevent the unwanted thing to happen between two people with different gender. Such as, sex outside marriage which is haram in Islamic teachings or even it might lead to unwanted pregnancy. However, throughout the time, due to the globalisation and modernisation in doing everyday activities Muslims, especially young Muslims need to adapt in order to have a good, happy, and desired life. Thus they needed to adapt to this event, including dating. Because it is an apparent phenomenon among the youth nowadays.

    ReplyDelete
  8. In my opinion, I believe that online dating could actually work. It could work because you can meet a lot of new people and chances. Because in real life, especially when you graduate from schools, your chance to meet new persons that actually fit you will not be easy to find. And it is actually applied for muslim people too. I am very disagree if there is any exception on Muslim people that can not sign up for online dating just because they are Muslims. Everyone in this planet has the same right and could not be judged based on their religion. Muslim people has any right to sign up for online datings. Probably, the reason why Muslim people signing up for online dating is because they see chances in online datings. Maybe they could meet people that has the same religion as them which is probably difficult to find in real life. In conclusion, we should support them and not judging them.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This is definitely going to be a controversial article. Just by reading the title itself, ‘Muslims’, ‘dating’, are signs that will cause lots of different arguments and points from people. Looking at it from the negative side first while keeping in mind about the Islam’s way of life and its rules; the idea of online dating won’t work since (as far as I remember, please don’t attack me) the idea of a man and a woman who aren’t married communicating in whatever form, is looked down in our religion and is limited as much as possible. However, if we look at the positive side with a modern mind-set, yet keeping in mind with some of the religion’s rules, online dating could be the most efficient and convenient way of finding a partner the ‘halal’ way. The most obvious point would be that it avoids any physical contact or meet-ups to find your right one. This avoids embarrassments like stare offs or first impressions since everything is already profiled digitally.

    ReplyDelete