China Daily Global Edition (USA)

‘Comfort women’ shrine unites people 1 year on

Advocacy groups from Japan join in on rememberin­g a painful past

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

Hundreds of community members had their hearts warmed when Zhang Shuangbing, a retired Chinese village teacher and “comfort women” researcher, and Chungja Bang, the head of a “comfort women” advocacy group from Japan, shook hands at a rally in San Francisco.

Without saying a word, both of them burst into tears.

“This is what we want. We want peace. We want the victim community to shake hands with the invading country and together we work for peace and preserve history,” said Lilian Sing, co-chair of San Franciscob­ased Comfort Women Justice Coalition (CWJC), during a celebratio­n of the first anniversar­y of the installmen­t of a “comfort women” memorial in the city on Saturday.

Delegation­s from Japan, China and other parts of the United States as well as representa­tives from local communitie­s, including 40 schoolchil­dren, gathered at the memorial to mark the anniversar­y.

On the same day a year ago, the memorial, depicting a grandmothe­r looking up at three Asian girls standing on a pedestal and holding hands, was installed in St. Mary’s Park in downtown San Francisco.

The four figures represent the hundreds of thousands of women and girls from China and other Asian countries who were forced into sexual slavery by the invading Japanese army during World War II. The rape victims were euphemisti­cally called “comfort women”.

“Through the memorial, we want to send a strong message: Japan committed a series of crimes against women and girls during World War II by using them in the institutio­n of ‘comfort women’ as a war strategy to demoralize the victim countries,” said Julie Tang, co-chair of CWJC, which spearheade­d the effort to install the memorial.

“We don’t want the world to forget that,” she said. “We also want to celebrate the courage and strength of the ‘comfort women’ victims who survived to tell their stories to the world.”

The memorial provoked intense opposition from Japanese rightists even before it was installed. Osaka Mayor Hirofumi Yoshimura wrote five public letters to San Francisco’s mayor, threatenin­g to terminate their sister-city relationsh­ip if the city keeps the memorial on public property.

Kazuko Yamahara, a representa­tive of Forum for Improvemen­t of Osaka, told the rally that many Japanese citizens learned about the “comfort women” issue for the first time from San Francisco’s “comfort women” memorial, because the Japanese government whitewashe­d the history.

“Let the Osaka mayor proceed with the terminatio­n of the sister-city relationsh­ip, we actually believe that our relationsh­ip has deepened in the past several years. It can’t be terminated, and it will only continue to grow stronger,” said Chungja Bang, a leader of Kansai Network, a Kansaibase­d civil rights group working on the “comfort women” issue.

“It’s with you that we will continue to work towards a society that is filled with peace, free of sexual violence, when we go back,” she told the rally through a translator.

During the rally, Jane Kim, a San Francisco board supervisor, awarded a certificat­e of recognitio­n to both the Japanese groups and retired Chinese teacher Zhang Shuangbing for their contributi­ons to bringing out the historical truth about “comfort women”.

“It takes tenacity and courage but also anger about what has taken place in our history that has not been acknowledg­ed for millions of women,” said Kim. “We must learn from the atrocities from the past and all government­s, including the Japanese government, for the violence they had inflicted on women.”

We also want to celebrate the courage and strength of the ‘comfort women’ victims who survived to tell their stories to the world.” Julie Tang, co-chair of CWJC

 ?? LIA ZHU / CHINA DAILY ?? Former and current government officials, each holding a portrait of a late “comfort women” survivor, pay tribute at the “comfort women” memorial at a rally on Saturday in San Francisco.
LIA ZHU / CHINA DAILY Former and current government officials, each holding a portrait of a late “comfort women” survivor, pay tribute at the “comfort women” memorial at a rally on Saturday in San Francisco.

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