This December, a museum will open in Taiwan that retains
the history for the purpose of resolving the Taiwan’s comfort women issue.
Prior to this, I had an opportunity on September 4 to visit the Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation that was in
preparation of the museum and to interview its representative, Ms. Shu Hua Kang
and its international public relations staff, Ms. Shuang-shuang Sandra Keng.
Taiwan’s Comfort Women
Issue
The Foundation was established in 1987 setting out to stop
trafficking girls for prostitution which they were forced into due to poverty.
Since then, the Foundation has dealt with DV issues and, in 1992, started engaging
in activities to resolve Taiwan’s comfort women issue.
Representative, Ms. Kang (right) and Ms. Keng
The fact not so well-known in Japan is that many
Taiwanese women were also forced to comfort Japanese soldiers during World War
II. The estimated number of those women is approximately 2,000.
Since 1992, the female victims (like halmeoni in Korean, they are called ah-ma in Chinese which means grandmother) have spoken out and the
number reached 58 by 1996. Many of them have passed away by now and there are
only 6 survivors. The oldest of them turns 92.
Remained documents prove that women were recruited back
then by the government office in Taiwan under Japan’s control and indicate the
Imperial Army’s arrangement for transportation for the women. The Japanese
government’s involvement in this matter has been clearly proved, however, all
trials that demanded the Japanese government for apology and compensation to comfort
women so far were lost. Still, the ah-ma
say they are not lost at heart.
The ah-ma and
their supporters have had public protests on every August 15 in front of the
exchange association (an alternative to the embassy). Although the Foundation
and supporters have been the only protesters for the last 4 years due to aging
of the ah-ma, they did hand over a
protest to the association staff. Starting next year, the protest day will be
switched to August 14 as it became the memorial day for comfort women.
Mental Care
Taiwanese ah-ma
refused the compensation offered by the Asian Women’s Fund in Japan because an
apology by the Japanese government was all they wanted.
The Taiwanese government has not raised an official protest
against the Japanese government but has offered livelihood aid to the ah-ma. The Foundation staff have supported
the ah-ma treating every one of them
sincerely.
The Foundation has particularly put an effort on mental
care.
The Foundation and supporters have offered over 70
workshops for the ah-ma who were
physically and psychologically hurt as young and had lots of hardships even
after that. Creating an opportunity for the ah-ma
to enjoy singing, dancing, and drawing pictures, and also speak out their
memories helps them to bring out their anger against the Japanese government as
well as their harsh fate, and also to heal their pain in heart. Some workshops
gave an opportunity to put on a wedding dress to the ah-ma who gave up on marriage for the past that they had no choice
but to become comfort women.
There was also a project to make the ah-ma’s dreams come true. Their dreams such as serving as a police
officer or mail carrier for a day became real in the project. Behind those
dreams was the adoration of the ah-ma
who took care of laundry at the police department over 20 years or who longed
to be a mail carrier because the occupation was a civil servant and required a
reading skill.
These activities show that the Foundation has supported
every ah-ma’s life staying closely
with their heart, which is quite impressive. These activities are no longer
possible as the surviving ah-ma are
quite old; however, counselors are still remaining a strong support for the ah-ma by visiting their homes
individually.
The Foundation
The Foundation has also made a significant contribution
to the revisions of laws in regards to violence against women and children. The
executive board members of the Foundation are female activists and lawyers.
Some woman started off with the activities at the Foundation and ended up as
the legal director of the government. The Foundation’s strength is the
connection with politics and laws. There are 50 staff members total and many of
them are still young. Upon our visit, too, over 10 young staff members were
working with their PCs at their individual booth in the Foundation office.
These staff members are not volunteers but are paid the salary almost equal to
the amount a university graduate with no career experience would usually
receive in Taiwan. This made both my accompanied graduate student and me pretty
envious. The Foundation is operated by the government assistance and donations.
It made my wish for such a powerful women’s movement even stronger.
The Foundation staff
For the Museum Opening in
December
The Peace Memorial Museum for the Comfort Women and Women’s
Rights are surely getting ready for its opening on this December 10 (the World
Human Rights Day). President Ma Ying-jeou is scheduled to attend the opening
ceremony.
“The success of this museum is the first challenge,” says
Ms. Kang. They wish the museum to be a training ground that hands down the
history to the next generation and shows the history from a global viewpoint.
It will contribute to prevent violence against women as well as wartime sexual violence.
“For the development, peace, and safety for women” – this
is the motto of the Foundation.
Representative Kang next to the sign of “No More
DV!”
Through the visit to the Foundation, I was quite
impressed with their powerful activities by sincerely staying close with female
victims including comfort women. My wish now is even stronger for WAN to play a
role in the global solidarity of women and strengthening of women’s rights.
Please visit the Foundation’s website which is also available
in English (http://www.twrf.org.tw/index.asp) and the website of Taiwan’s Virtual Museum on Sexual
Slavery by Japanese Military which is also available in Japanese (http://www.womandpeace.org.tw/www_jp/index.html). Furthermore, with the Foundation’s cooperation, the
special exhibition “Taiwan “Comfort Women” Testimonies: How Ah-ma were Made into Japanese” is underway
at the Women’s Active Museum on War and Peace (WAM) in Waseda, Tokyo until June
2014. (For details, see http://wam-peace.org/.)
WAN is planning to cover a story about the December museum
opening on our website*.
*Note: The museum opening has been postponed to mid-2014.
Original article on the WAN website: http://wan.or.jp/reading/?p=12210
translated and adapted by K. Moriya.
Original article on the WAN website: http://wan.or.jp/reading/?p=12210
translated and adapted by K. Moriya.
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