Comfort women

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Comfort women
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese: 慰安婦
Simplified Chinese: 慰安妇
Hanyu Pinyin: Wèiān Fù
Wade-Giles: Wei-An Fu
Korean name
Hangul: 위안부
Hanja: 慰安婦
Revised Romanization: wianbu
McCune-Reischauer: wianbu
Chinese girl from one of the Japanese Army's 'comfort battalions'
Enlarge
Chinese girl from one of the Japanese Army's 'comfort battalions'

Comfort women (慰安婦 ianfu?) or military comfort women (従軍慰安婦 jūgun-ianfu?) is a euphemism for women who provided (or were forced to provide) sex in military brothels in Japanese-occupied countries during World War II. There are different theories on the breakdown of the comfort women's place of origin. According to Kanto Gakuin University professor Hirofumi Hayashi, the majority of the women were from Japan, Korea, and China. [1] [2] [3] Others came from the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Dutch East Indies, and other Japanese-occupied countries and regions.

According to Chuo University professor Yoshiaki Yoshimi, there were about 2 000 centers where as many as 200 000 Koreans, Philippina, Taiwanese, Burmese, Indonesian, Dutch, Australian and some Japanese women were forced to engage in sexual activity with Imperial military personnel. [1]

However, for Nihon University professor Ikuhiko Hata, linked to the negationnist society Tsukurukai, the women working in the licensed pleasure quarter were 40% Japanese, 20% Koreans, 10% Chinese, with others making up the remaining 30%.[2]

Estimates of the number of comfort women during the war range from 80,000 to 200,000, with testimony by surviving comfort women suggesting a number at the higher end of the scale.[3] [4] Most of the brothels where comfort women served were located in Japanese military bases.[citation needed]

The Japanese government does not fully recognize allegations of large scale forced prostitution and, as such, does not additionally compensate the participants beyond what they earned during their period of service. However, the Japanese government has repeatedly offered apologies for any wounds they have caused and has established the Asian Women's Fund.

Contents

[edit] Brothels as part of Japanese military policy

Historical research into Japanese government records documents several reasons given for the establishment of military brothels. First, Japanese authorities hoped that by providing easily accessible prostitutes and sexual slaves, the morale and ultimately the military effectiveness of Japanese soldiers would be improved. Second, by institutionalizing brothels and placing them under official scrutiny, the government hoped to control the spread of STDs. Lastly, creating brothels in military bases directly on the front line removed the perceived need to grant leave to soldiers.

In the early stages of the war, Japanese authorities recruited prostitutes through conventional means.[citation needed] Middlemen advertised for prostitutes in newspapers circulating in Japan and the Japanese colonies of Korea, Taiwan, Manchukuo, and mainland China. Many who answered the advertisements were already prostitutes and offered their services voluntarily. Others were sold by their families to the military due to economic hardship. However, these sources soon dried up, especially from Japan. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs resisted further issuance of travel visas for Japanese prostitutes, feeling it tarnished the image of the Japanese Empire. The military turned to acquiring comfort women outside mainland Japan, especially from Korea and occupied China. Many women were tricked or defrauded into joining the military brothels. Others were kidnapped. Japanese prostitutes who remained in the military brothels often became karayukisan, or brothel managers, leaving the non-Japanese comfort women to suffer serial rapes.[citation needed]

The military also sought comfort women from local sources. In urban areas, conventional advertising through middlemen was used alongside kidnapping. However, along the front lines, especially in the countryside where middlemen were rare, the military often directly demanded that local leaders procure women for the brothels. This situation became worse as the war progressed. Under the strain of the war effort, the military became unable to provide enough supplies to Japanese units; in response, the units made up the difference by demanding or looting supplies from the locals. Moreover, when the locals, especially Chinese, were considered hostile, Japanese soldiers carried out the "Three Alls Policy", which included indiscriminately kidnapping and raping local civilians.

It is also claimed[name a specific person/group] that beatings and physical torture were not uncommon. A single woman could expect to have sex a dozen to forty times a day, often resulting in injury to the genitals.[citation needed] Women were divided into three or four categories, depending on their length of service. The "freshest" women were the least likely to suffer from STDs and were placed in the highest category. Virgins were usually given to officers for first sex. As time went on, the comfort women were downgraded as the likelihood of their acquiring STDs became more certain. Any others who were suspected with pregnancy were forced to undergo crude methods of abortion, more often than not killing the women through over-bleeding during surgical removals.[citation needed] When they were considered likely to be too diseased to be of any further use, they were abandoned, oftentimes far from home, or even in a different country, as the comfort women were shipped wherever deemed necessary. Sometimes to conceal the existence of their use of comfort women, retreating Japanese battalions would stash these women in secret caves and blast the entrance, causing landslides that sealed the cave.[citation needed] Many women reported having their uteruses rot from the diseases acquired from being raped by thousands of men over several years, at times requiring surgical removal.[citation needed]

[edit] Responsibility and compensation

Japan regards all World War II compensation claims to be settled.

Both South Korea and Japan mutually confirm that all claims between the countries and their people have been settled completely and finally by the Treaty on Basic Relations and Agreement of Economic Cooperation and Property Claims between Japan and the Republic of Korea in 1965. Both countries confirmed that the treaty includes all claims from South Korea on a government to government basis, but private or corporate compensations are still not settled. The female victims more than anything would like an official apology by the Japanese government. Many women have declined offers of money for compensation and would prefer acknowledgement of their ordeal.

Despite this, in 1990, the Korean Council for Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery filed suit, demanding official apologies and crimes against humanity compensation. Several surviving comfort women also independently filed suit in the Tokyo District Court. More suits followed in the ensuing years. It was widely expected that the court would reject all of these claims on the basis of the statutes of limitation or on the basis that the state is immune from civil suits in court on the matter of war time conduct. However, these suits have helped to revive and sustain the issue of comfort women in Japan as well as in the international media.

Initially the Japanese government denied any official connection to the wartime brothels; in June 1990, the Japanese government declared that all brothels were run by private contractors. However, in 1992, the historian Yoshimi Yoshiaki discovered incriminating documents in the archives of Japan's Defense Agency indicating that the military was directly involved in running the brothels (by, for example, selecting the agents who recruited). [5] Since then, Japan's official position has been one of admitting "moral but not legal" responsibility.

Following official admission of a military connection to the brothels in 1992, the debate has shifted to consideration of evidence and testimony of coercive recruitment of comfort women during the war. In a number of mock trials (without cross-examination), surviving women have testified of being subjected to coercion and rape. In 1995, Japan set up an "Asia Women's Fund" for atonement in the form of material compensation and to provide each surviving comfort woman with an unofficial signed apology from the prime minister. But because of the unofficial nature of the fund, many comfort women have rejected these payments and continue to seek an official apology and compensation.

However, on 17 January 2005, additional documents detailing the minutes of Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and South Korea were released by South Korean government. They suggest that the South Korean government agreed not to demand further compensation, either at the government or individual level against the Japanese government, after receiving $800 million in grants and soft loans from Japan as compensation for its 1910-1945 occupation, and to take all responsibility for individual cases in place of the Japanese government. This further reduces the likelihood of legal proceedings resulting in any formal admission of responsibility.

Clearly time is on the side of the Japanese government. The number of surviving comfort women has dwindled from many thousands to a mere handful, all of whom will have died in another few years.

[edit] The ongoing debate over comfort women

The popular conception of "comfort women" outside Japan is that many comfort women were kidnapped by Japanese soldiers to serve as sex slaves[citation needed] under direct order from the Japanese government.

Prostitution and bonded labour were both legal[citation needed] in Japan when the events of World War II unfolded. Some assert that if the middlemen were coercing women, then much of the blame, whether legal or moral, can be shifted to them. Others maintain that even if legal, the system was morally opprobrious, should not have been legal and that the exploitation was on such a large scale that the government could not be absolved of complicity. While there is no dispute that the sexual slaves were acquired at the behest of the Japanese, they argue that these middlemen were not Japanese government officials, that women were sold to middlemen by their parents out of financial privation, and that many local community leaders used trickery or coercion to provide their own local women to the Japanese. Since forcible procurement by direct action occurred alongside procurement by private middlemen, it is often difficult to separate the two. Also, the issue of who caused the financial hardship on these families needs to be evaluated.

Fig.1. Recruitment advertising for Comfort women in Korean newspaper. "Wanted! Comfort women!" Age: 18-30, 17-23, Payment: 300YEN/month (You can draw wages in advance up to 3000Yen.  Contact: Imai job introduction company)
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Fig.1. Recruitment advertising for Comfort women in Korean newspaper.
"Wanted! Comfort women!" Age: 18-30, 17-23, Payment: 300YEN/month (You can draw wages in advance up to 3000Yen. Contact: Imai job introduction company)

Pointing to the complicity of locals allows those who have an incentive to absolve Japan of its war guilt and to defeat compensation claims to deflect the responsibility away from the Japanese military. They claim that Japan had merely taken advantage of an already accepted local practice. The issue is extremely controversial, especially in regard to Korean comfort women. Subsequent research strongly suggests that Japanese soldiers on the frontline did indeed force women into military brothels.{{cn} However, apologists for the Japanese government[name a specific person/group] suggest that somehow the context in which such acts were carried out changes the nuance of the moral responsibility for the rapes. Moreover, the existence of middlemen makes it difficult for ex-comfort women to pursue compensation claims.(See Fig.1 Recruitment advertising by Imai job introduction company for Comfort women in Korean News papaers, 1944)

In 1991, Asahi Shimbun, one of the major newspapers of Japan, ran a series on comfort women for a year. This is often regarded as the trigger of a revived controversy over comfort women in Japan, also coinciding with re-examinations of other wartime atrocities such as the Nanking Massacre. In this series the Asahi Shimbun published excerpts of the book published in 1983 by Kiyosada Yoshida Watashino sensō hanzai - Chōsenjin Renkō Kōsei Kiroku (My War Crime; The Record of Impressment of Koreans), in which the author confesses to forcibly procuring women from Jeju Island in Korea under the direct order of the Japanese military. [citation needed] However, Dr. Ikuhiko Hata showed that the events portrayed in the book was a fabrication. [citation needed]

In 1992, the paper also published the discovery of the documents in the archives of Japan's National Defense Agency indicating that the military was directly involved in recruitment of comfort women. The article implied that the document proves the Japanese government's complicity in the forcible kidnapping of women. The article was published five days prior to a visit by Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa to South Korea (Miyazawa made a formal apology during that visit). [citation needed]

There is debate over how much blame should be placed on the military hierarchy, or for that matter, the Japanese government. Common defenses of the Japanese government at the time are the lack of a document proving that the Japanese military ordered middlemen to procure comfort women by force, that the purpose of military brothel system was to prevent rape, and that the military issued the directive to select agents carefully in order that these agents would not get involved in illegal methods of procurement. Those who deny official responsibility admit that abuse at a local level might have occurred, but this is often blamed on failure of oversight, confused policy in regard to a suspected guerilla force, and a lack of resources at the front line. Former Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone (in)famously stated in his memoir that he set up a comfort house for his troops of about 3,000 when he was a navy lieutenant in charge of accounting. When criticised, he claimed that he was unaware that the women were forced into service. [citation needed]

[edit] See also

IJA special research units
Unit 100 | Unit 200 | Unit 516 | Unit 543 | Unit 731 | Unit 773 | Unit Ei 1644 | Unit 1855 | Unit 2646| Unit 8604 | Unit 9420

[edit] References

Some recent work on the comfort women issue include:

  • Tanaka, Yuki Japan's Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery and Prostitution During World War II and the US Occupation, London, Routledge: 2002. ISBN 0-415-19401-6.
  • Yoshimi, Yoshiaki Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military During World War II, Columbia University Press, 2001. (mentioned RAA too) ISBN 0-231-12032-X.
  • Molasky, Michael S. American Occupation of Japan and Okinawa, Routledge, 1999. ISBN 0-415-19194-7, ISBN 0-415-26044-2.
  • D. Kim-Gibson, Silence Broken: Korean Comfort Women, 1999. ISBN 0-931209-88-9.
  • Hicks, George L. The Comfort Women: Japan's Brutal Regime of Enforced Prostitution in the Second World War, 1997. ISBN 0-393-31694-7.
  • Schellstede, Sangmie Choi. Comfort Women Speak: Testimony by Sex Slaves of the Japanese Military, 2000. ISBN 0-8419-1413-3.

A review of the Tanaka text can be found in the academic journal Intersections, Issue 9:

A review of some of these books and a history and historiography of the issue, from a critical viewpoint, can be found in issue 58:2 of Monumenta Nipponica:

  • Wakabayashi, Bob Tadashii "Comfort Women: Beyond Litigious Feminism"

A work of literature on the issue was created by Korean American writer Nora Okja Keller:

[edit] External links

[edit] Academic research

[edit] Japanese official statements

[edit] United States historical documents

[edit] Modern peacekeeping and forced prostitution

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Yoshimi, Comfort Women : Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military during World War II, Columbia University press, 2002.
  2. ^ Ikuo, HATA,The Legend of Comfort Women - A Quantitative Observation, No.388, Gendai Korea, pp. 31-43, 1999.1.25, Japan, http://hnn.us/articles/printfriendly/9954.html
  3. ^ range? Japanese Times password required
  4. ^ Japan court rules against 'comfort women' Reuters report on CNN March 29, 2001
  5. ^ Yoshimi, ibid.