HIRC Passes Resolution on ‘Comfort’ Women

[Corrected] You may have noticed that the House International Relations Committe just passed a bill calling on Japan to take responsibility for enslaving “comfort women” during World War II. Adrian Hong [as an indivual, but not as LiNK’s president] from LiNK is asking for your help in getting it before the full House. I’m reprinting his appeal below.

Friends,

The brutal colonization of the Korean peninsula by Imperial Japan is common knowledge to many of us, but lesser known is the plight of the “comfort women” caught up in Japan’s aggressive military expansion in the first half of the 20th century. Over 200,000 girls and young women, predominately from Korea but also from the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore and the Dutch East Indies, were forced into bonded sexual slavery. Many of the girls were tricked into thinking they were signing up to work in a factory or as a house servant, and others were kidnapped. According to testimony, a “comfort woman” could expect to be raped up to forty times a day, often resulting in serious physical injury, as well as numerous STDs. Women were divided into categories depending on “freshness”; virgins, the top category, were given to officers for first rape, and as time passed women were downgraded gradually in category, until they were ultimately abandoned, oftentimes far away from their homes. Many women reported having their uterus rot from diseases and many others became barren and unable to give birth.

I have met many of these old women personally. They look, talk and have all the mannerisms of my grandparents- but their childhood and teenage years were wrought with some of the most horrible suffering known in this past century, without exaggeration. After the war ended, many of these women managed to make it back to their families, and sometimes, to their husbands. Some were abandoned, seen as causing “dishonor” to their families. Others were never able to bring up the terrible things that they went through, for fear of being left to live and die alone. Some of these women now reside in the “House of Sharing”, a private home for these women in Korea [ see http://www.nanum.org/eng/ for more information ].

These elderly women have held protests at Japanese embassies worldwide with a persistent and perseverance that puts those of us younger folks to shame. For decades their claims and cries were ignored by governments- including that of the Republic of Korea for a time, and many activists and organizations have toiled for years to bring this issue to the forefront.

Now, we may be able to change all of that, and give these women the respect and recognition they deserve.

Yesterday, here in Washington, D.C., the House Committee on International Relations marked up House Resolution 759, which expresses the sense of the House of Representatives of the United States that the Government of Japan should formally acknowledge and accept responsibility for it’s sexual enslavement of “comfort women” during it’s occupation of Asia in the first half of the 20th century. The majority of the 200,000 victims were Korean girls and women, many of them in their teens.

The resolution is sponsored by Representative Lane Evans (D-IL), and co-sponsored with over 50 other members. Previous similar efforts were blocked successfully by powerful lobbyists for the Japanese government and those who believe that such a resolution would damage relations with Tokyo.

The new bill is reworked and slightly revised to gain wider support- for example, it does not mention any compensation for victims, and calls for Tokyo to “take responsibility”- rather than apologize. As a result this resolution has an unprecedented wide array of support from both parties.

Now that the bill is marked up, we must move to get the resolution to the House Floor so that the entire Congress can vote.

This bill MUST be passed before Congress leaves session in October. Time is running out. On a more grave angle- the few remaining comfort women in this world are in their 70s, 80s and 90s. Thousands of them have perished without any formal recognition of their plight- and have had to live with being slandered as prostitutes and willing partners in the vicious exploitation they fell victim to.

Simply put, they are dying. It is now or never.

Here is how you can help:
1) Forward this email to all of your friends and family, as well as to any listservs you’re aware of. Post it on blogs and web boards. Get the word out!
2) Call, email, write and fax [ all of the above! ] your local representative, and ask them to vote yes on this bill, and to urge House leadership to bring the resolution to vote on the House Floor. If you don’t know who your representative is, go to http://www.house.gov/.
3) Contact the offices of both Majority Leader John Boehner and Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and ask them to make sure this resolution is brought to the House Floor for a full vote WITHOUT DELAY.

Majority Leader John Boehner Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert
H-107 Capitol H-232 Capitol
Washington, DC 20515-6502 Washington, DC 20515-6501
202-225-4000, fax 202-225-5117 202-225-0600 or fax 202-226-1996

Please take just a moment of your day to do something great by doing something little for these women. If you would like more information, you can reach me at hong.adrian@gmail.com .

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Thank you.
Adrian Hong

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7 Responses

  1. Didn’t the Japanese already apologize for what they did? And didn’t they pay hundreds of millions of dollars to the South Korean government in the understanding that the money would be redistributed to victims as the South Korean government saw fit?

    Why is LiNK getting involved in this? Shouldn’t they be focusing on what the NK in their name stands for? I’ve just removed their blog from my bookmarks.

  2. Hi guys,
    This is not a LiNK initiative. It is a personal request. Could you please change accordingly?

    Adrian

  3. OK, with that correction made, I’m not sure I really “get” how asking for Japan’s sincere acknowledgement of what it did during the war is so objectionable. Japanese leaders have apologized for certain actions during that time, but Japan’s own discussion of the war centers around denial and delusions of victimhood. It’s a painful thing to acknowledge the wrongs of one’s own country, and I suppose it’s beyond some people to place contrition and correction in a greater context.

    The greater context is that today, Japan clearly is a force for good in the world (which is something that other nations with distorted views of history can’t claim: China and North Korea, to name two). A refusal to acknowledge past wrongs only opens questions about Japan’s real values and muddles that greater truth, and the presence of war criminals dishonors men who died for their country with honor.