Sex Slave Comfort Women Ww2

Sex Slave Comfort Women Ww2




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World War II Japan’s “Comfort Women” And The Horrific Sexual Slavery They Endured
By All That's Interesting | Checked By Kara Goldfarb
Though it has been minimized and underplayed, the story of the “comfort women” who worked in Japanese military brothels during World War II is a shocking one that warrants more attention. After all, these women were basically sex slaves.
The first “comfort stations” were set up in 1932 in barracks around continental China, then being occupied by Japan.
Since prostitution was legal in Japan at the time, the first comfort stations were thought to contain volunteer prostitutes meant to keep the troops entertained. Many of these licensed prostitution institutions existed in an area called the Dutch East Indies, or present-day Indonesia. Essentially, the first comfort stations were recreations of these legal brothels set up near military bases.
But as the war escalated and Japan conquered and acquired new territory, it turned to enslaving women.
The Imperial Army’s intention when setting up the comfort stations was the desire to restore their image by confining any rape and sexual misconduct to military facilities. It was also a means of keeping military personnel healthy, as soldiers who had previously committed widespread rape when they reached new territories during war typically wound up contracting venereal diseases and other illnesses.
Wikimedia CommonsChinese and Malayan girls taken as comfort women for Japanese troops.
The expansion of more comfort stations for these reasons was carried out after the horrific Rape of Nanking that took place during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937 when the Japanese military raped around 20,000 women.
The Japanese military would take women from the areas they were currently occupying, namely Korea, China, and the Philippines. The military would entice them with jobs like nursing the Japanese Imperial Army, cooking, and laundry service.
But in reality, most of the women brought in were forced into sexual services. They became sex slaves who were repeatedly beaten, raped, and tortured.
The military used several tactics to recruit women and girls who would become comfort women.
One such method was deceit. The military would mislead them in regards to what a comfort station was: many Korean women were under the notion that services provided at the comfort stations included tending to wounded soldiers and generally keeping their spirits high.
Another recruitment method involved purchasing young women. The colonies of Taiwan and Korea were poor during the war because Japan had taken any available means of production for the war effort. So desolate families would sell their young women to the recruiters.
Under military authority, a Japanese manager in Burma would buy Korean women for 300 – 1,000 yen, depending on looks and age.
Then there were times where the women were purely taken against their will, abducted by force, with witnesses who saw the recruiters and the army murder family members who attempted to stop them.
As the war got worse for the Japanese Army, it got worse for the comfort women as well. In the summer of 1942, starting with their defeat to the Americans at the Battle of Midway, the Japanese suffered a series of loses. This caused them to retreat from island to island as the Allied forces continued to conquer each one.
FlickrComfort Women protest monument at Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea.
The comfort women were taken along with the soldiers. This displaced them from their families and homelands, securing their future as true prisoners with no freedom.
As the war came to an end, the women were either abandoned by retreating troops or stuck with the defeated military and whatever was in store for them.
The Pacific War ended on August 15, 1945. Some women didn’t return to their homes until the late 1990s — long after the war ended. Most didn’t return home at all. It’s estimated that only 25% of the comfort women were able to survive the daily abuse inflicted upon them.
Those who did find their way back faced many health problems, including the inability to have children.
Unfortunately, accounts of Japan’s comfort women and what they went through aren’t well detailed. The Japanese government was reluctant to discuss what these women and girls went through, and many documents pertaining to the women and the comfort stations were destroyed.
In 1992, history professor Yoshiaki Yoshimi found documents at the library of the Japan Self-Defense Agency and made them public. The documents showed clear links between the Imperialist Army and the comfort stations that had been set up.
Only into the late 20th century did survivors of the comfort stations come forward to tell their stories.
One such case was that of Maria Rosa L. Henson. She lived in the Philipines and was raped numerous times by Japanese soldiers before being forced to be a comfort women in 1943 at age 15. It stayed that way for nine months until she was rescued by guerrillas in January of 1944.
In 1992, at 65 years old, she decided to come forward with her story. She was the first Philippine woman to do so. The discovery forced the Chief Cabinet Secretary, Koichi Kato, who had previously denied the government’s involvement in the plight of the comfort women, to come forward and admit their involvement.
Even still, when asked why it took so long for the government to come forward, Kato told the New York Times:
“We did our best. Such problems, unthinkable in a time of peace, occurred in the midst of a war in which behavior often defied common sense. But I have to admit that it took a certain amount of time for us to recognize this problem correctly.”
ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty ImagesKorean delegates protest what they consider Japan’s inadequate response to the use of Korean and other women as comfort women in World War II, at the United Nations 4th World Women’s NGO Forum. September 2, 1995.
In 2015, while at a press conference with President Obama, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was confronted about Japan’s comfort women and was asked if he was willing to apologize. Abe stated:
“I am deeply pained to think about the comfort women who experienced immeasurable pain and suffering as a result of victimization due to human trafficking.”
He added, “This is a feeling that I share equally with my predecessors.”
Speculation about whether Abe’s statement constituted as an actual apology has been debated. It was also reported that Abe set up a one billion yen (or $9 million) fund to help the surviving comfort women and their families.
As the issue has come to light in recent years, “peace movement” monuments have been built in places like Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and even in Australia and the United States that stand to honor comfort women.
After learning about Japan’s horrifying use of sex slaves during World War II, read about Nancy Wake, World War II White Mouse of the French Resistance. Then, read about history’s most powerful speeches given by women.
All That's Interesting is a Brooklyn-based digital publisher that seeks out the stories to illuminate the past, present, and future.
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For decades, China's Second World War sex slaves have remained silent about their past. Many live in poverty and still suffer physical ailments and psychological damage from the experience of being forced to work in Japan's military brothels.
There is little reliable data on how many females, known as "comfort women", were taken and used as sex slaves. Chinese experts estimate the Japanese Imperial Army captured and coerced around 200,000 women, mainly from Korea and China, into providing sexual services before and during the war.
As Japan's neighbours await Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's statement marking the end of the war 70 years ago, time is running out for the women. Kim Bok-dong is not hopeful that Abe is about to apologise. Kim, 90, is one of South Korea's 47 surviving comfort women. Eight have died this year and South Korean President Park Geun-hye said the 15 August anniversary may be the last chance for a Japanese leader to resolve the issue.
Kim was 14 when a Japanese police officer and a soldier came to her rural home, demanding she accompany them to work at a garment factory. "My mother protested: 'She is so little, what can she do?' But they said I could learn, so it should be all right, which is how I ended up going, thinking it'd be just for a few days." Instead, she was gone for seven years, held at military brothels in southern China, Indonesia and Singapore.
Former South Korean comfort woman Kim Bok-dong poses with a copy of her painting titled The Day A 14-year-old Girl Is Stolen Away in her room at \"Our Home\", a special shelter for former comfort women, in Seoul. She says that in 1940 she was taken into a Japanese military brothel. On weekdays she was forced to have sex with 15 Japanese soldiers a day. On weekends she said it seemed like it was more than 50. She was then taken to Japanese military \"comfort stations\" in China, Hong Kong, Sumatra, Java, Malaysia and Singapore until Japan surrendered Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
Abducted from her Pyongyang home at the age of 13, Gil Won-ok spent five years in Japanese military brothels in China. She caught syphilis and developed tumours, and a Japanese military doctor removed her uterus leaving her unable to bear children. "To be able to receive an apology, that will allow us to close our eyes," she said from the home she shares with Kim in Seoul, the Korean capital. "But I doubt that will happen easily."
South Korean former comfort woman Gil Won-ok sits in her room at the \"Our Home\" shelter. According to her testimony to researchers, Gil, who was born in what is now North Korea in 1927, was taken to a Japanese military brothel in China in 1940. She caught syphilis and developed tumours, and a Japanese military doctor removed her uterus leaving her unable to bear children. Gil said she wants to receive an apology from the Japanese government Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
In China, Ren Lane, who lives in the northern province of Shanxi, kept secret for much of her life the fact that she was taken from a village as a 15-year-old girl and repeatedly raped by Japanese soldiers during the war. An apology from Japan would be small solace, though she does not expect to live to see it.
Zhang Xiantu was 15 when she was abducted from her home by soldiers of the Japanese Imperial Army and held for 20 days in a military barracks, where she was raped repeatedly. Her family gathered what money they could from friends and relatives and eventually bought her back from the Japanese. "I was terrified. At that time I was just a child, and a major wrongdoing was committed against me. [My family] sold everything we had. I had nothing to eat, nothing to drink. From relatives they borrowed CN¥800 to redeem me. If it weren't for that money I would never have returned home. I suffered so much. There was so much suffering," she said of her experience.
Zhang said it took nearly two years for her to recover physically, but the psychological damage has lasted until this day. "Only those from the mountain village who were abducted with me knew about it. No one else knew. No one else knew," said Zhang. The 89-year-old is becoming increasingly frail and is unable to eat proper meals and is mostly confined to her bed these days.
She has received no help from either the Chinese or Japanese governments for her ordeal. She once joined several other women from Yu County in Shanxi province to sue the Japanese government for an apology and reparations in the late 1990s, which they were denied. Their attempt yielded nothing.
The building where she was imprisoned is dilapidated but still stands nearby.
A former fortress where Japanese soldiers kept women they abducted during World War Two is seen abandoned in Xipan village, Shanxi Province, China. According to Zhang Shuangbing, an independent researcher about Chinese comfort women, Japanese soldiers stayed at the fortress for three years during the war and kept over 50 abducted women serving as comfort women there Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
Zhang Shuangbing, a retired primary school teacher, has been researching the subject of comfort women, inspired by a neighbour and former comfort woman, Liu Mianhuan, who died of cervical cancer nearly three years ago. Liu remains nearly forgotten in her small village of Xipan in Shanxi province but Zhang frequently visits her grave and provides offerings.
Zhang said most comfort women such as Liu did not speak openly about their experiences due to fears of persecution. "She wanted to speak out but she didn't dare all the way until 1992. From 1972 when I moved here to 20 years later 1992. I started my investigation in 1982, and only when she went to court in 1992, she started to tell me the suffering and hardship she had been through in great detail so I could help her file a lawsuit," said Zhang. Liu, along with three other former comfort women from Yu County in Shanxi province, sued the Japanese government for an apology and reparations in 1995, one of the first in a series of four cases by former Chinese comfort women against the Japanese government. None of the lawsuits were successful.
Japan acknowledged in 1993 that the state played a role in forcing Korean and Chinese women into military brothels and set up a fund to provide compensation to survivors in 1995. However, Japan has refused to pay direct compensation to survivors. Abe, a former critic of the 1993 statement, now says he will uphold it. Many Japanese conservatives say there is no proof that authorities directly coerced the women.
Although comfort women in South Korea have been provided with official aid from their government, the women from China have not received such help, said Beijing-based lawyer Kang Jian, who has represented many of China's former comfort women in lawsuits filed against the Japanese government. Some local governments across China, such as in Hainan province, have provided the women with some support, Kang said. But it is difficult for the government to take care of most of them due to the remoteness of the locations in which they live. Many of their families also would rather not have them speak openly about their experiences due to the shame it might bring, Kang added.
Former comfort woman Hao Yuelian poses at her house in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, China. She says she was abducted by Japanese soldiers at the age of 17 and was forced to serve as a comfort woman for over 20 days during World War Two Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
Time is running out for compensation and closure for these women who are now well over the age of 80.
This article was first published on August 12, 2015
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