Comfort Women Speak: Testimony by Sex Slaves of the Japanese Military : Includes New United Nations Human Rights Report"During World War II, an estimated 200,000 girls and young women were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese imperial military, which was authorized by the highest levels of Japan's wartime government. This system resulted in the largest, most methodical and most deadly mass rape of women in recorded history." "Japan's Kem pei tai political police and their collaborators tricked or abducted females as young as eleven years old and imprisoned them in military rape camps known as "comfort stations," situated throughout Asia. These "comfort women" were forced to service as many as fifty Japanese soldiers a day. They were often beaten, starved, and made to endure abortions or injections with sterilizing drugs. Only a few of the women survived, and those that did suffered permanent physical and emotional damage." "Little was known about the true scope of this crime against humanity until 1991, when after almost fifty years of silence, seventy-four-old Kim Hak-soon bravely told the world of her experiences as a comfort woman. Her testimony gave others the strength to tell their stories. The Washington Coalition for Comfort Women Issues (WCCW) carefully transcribed and translated the stories of nineteen survivors, which are now presented in this book." "These courageous women have shared their experiences to document a crime that must never be repeated. They seek a formal apology and reparation from Japan's government for the horrors it imposed on them. Thus far, that government has responded with gestures that many survivors regard as a new and more subtle form of the same degradation they have faced throughout their lives." "This is not simply a history book. Comfort Women Speak documents the lives of nineteen courageous women who continue to fight to bring to account one of the most powerful governments in the world."--BOOK JACKET.text / Debra An. |
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Contents
Pak Kyungsoon | 73 |
Excerpt of the report of Ms Radhika Coomaraswamy | 112 |
Excerpt of the keynote speech by Mme Mutsuko Miki | 130 |
Copyright | |
Common terms and phrases
acts Agreement Allied Powers apology arrived Asian Women's Fund became brother China civilians claims comfort stations committed compensation Court crimes against humanity criminal cubicles customary international law Democratic People's Republic documents enslavement establishment factory forced former comfort women gave Government of Japan Hague Convention human rights Ibid individual international humanitarian law Interviewed in Seoul involvement issue Japanese army Japanese Government Japanese Government's Japanese Imperial Army Japanese military Japanese soldiers Justice Korean girls Korean women legal responsibility liability living main report married ment military sexual slavery night non-governmental organizations Nurnberg officers pain parents Philippines police prohibited prosecution prostitution Pusan Pyongyang rape centres recruitment regulations reparations Republic of Korea sailed Second World sex slaves Shimonoseki ship Special Rapporteur suffered supra note surviving Taegu testimonies tion Tokyo told took train Tribunal truck United Nations visited wartime woman women victims

