A Date With a Muslim

Joe the Janissary met Sophie Ellis-Bextor under a lantern-lit café terrace just after sunset.

“Joe,” Sophie smiled, stirring her tea, “if I were to date a Muslim man, what would that even look like?”

Joe straightened his coat with theatrical seriousness. “Sophie, in traditional Islamic practice, we do not ‘date’ in the Western sense. The idea of casual romance, candlelit ambiguity, and ‘let’s see where it goes’ is… how do I say… structurally inefficient.”

She raised an eyebrow. “Not even a speed date? Five minutes, a handshake, a ‘What’s your favorite color?’”

Joe paused. “Speed… consultation, perhaps.”

“And what about sharing a date after the Ramadan fast?” she teased. “A sweet one. Medjool, maybe.”

Joe sighed. “Sharing a date after Ramadan is acceptable. Sharing a date-date before marriage is where the jurisprudence committee begins sweating.”

Sophie laughed. “So no disco ball? No dramatic entrance? Not even a chaperoned coffee?”

Joe considered this carefully. “There is something called halal courtship. Families aware. Intentions clear. Public settings. Respectful conversation. No vanishing into the night like it’s one of your music videos.”

“So,” she grinned, “less ‘Murder on the Dancefloor’ and more ‘Minutes from the Meeting’?”

“Precisely,” Joe nodded. “The objective is clarity, not confusion. In many Muslim cultures, the purpose of meeting is marriage. Not trial subscriptions.”

Sophie leaned forward. “But surely cultures evolve. Muslims live in London, Toronto, Sarajevo… You can’t freeze romance in the 9th century.”

Joe smiled. “True. Many Muslims today adapt. They might meet for coffee, talk privately in public spaces, maintain boundaries. The key principle is modesty and intention — not secrecy or impulsiveness.”

“And you?” she asked.

Joe hesitated dramatically. “I will consult my companions about this Western ritual of ‘taking a woman on a date.’ We may draft a proposal. Perhaps: supervised espresso.”

“With dessert?”

“Only after sunset,” he said solemnly. “And definitely a real date — the fruit — to maintain orthodoxy.”

Sophie laughed again. “Well, Joe, if you ever need a cultural liaison, I’m available for a very respectful, committee-approved coffee.”

Joe bowed slightly. “Then we shall begin with tea. It is less controversial.”