Startseite Projekte Menschenrechte Trostfrauen KIM Won-ok: Former "Comfort Women" Demand Japan's Apology

"Trostfrauen", Wiedergutmachung und Menschenrechte

KIM Won-ok: Former "Comfort Women" Demand Japan's Apology

5.8.2009

KIM Won-ok, 81 Jahre
Former "Comfort Women" Demand Japan's Apology

(Quelle: Korea Council)


KIL Won-ok

Kil Won-ok (age 81)


is former "comfort woman"-turned-activist calling for the Japanese government's formal apology for the sexual enslavement of girls and women (taken mostly from colonial Korea) during the World War II. She was only 13 years old when she was forcefully taken to the war fronts to "serve" Japanese soldiers. Battered and ashamed, she could not return to her home in northern Korea when the war ended and lived alone and poor in the south, keeping her silence until she joined a group advocating for the rights of former "comfort women."

She and representatives of the Korean Council for Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery by Japan came to the U.S. recently on the occasion of the second anniversary of the passing of the US House Resolution 121 that called for Japan's formal apology. Even with this passage and others in Canada and European assemblies, Japanese government is not coming forward with an apology -- in a stark contrast to postwar Germany's handling of the holocaust. The photo shows Ms. Kil during the "Wednesday Demonstration" in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul, Korea. The women have staged the weekly demonstrations every Wednesday continuously for the past 17 years, yet not a single Japanese official has come out and acknowledged the women's presence.

"Trostfrauen"

WIEDERGUTMACHUNG ?

 

 
KANG Duk-Kyung:
"Bestraft die Verantwortlichen damit Friede werde"

 

Grundlegende Texte 1993

4.8.1993
Statement by the Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei KONO on the result of the study on the issue of "comfort women"

4.8.1993
On the Issue of Wartime "Comfort Women". Hier sind die Ergebnisse der Nachforschungen durch die Regierung zusammengefasst.


Wichtige Texte

15.2.2007
US Congressional Hearings for WWII sex slaves of Japan. Testimonies.

1.3.2007
The Jeremiad of “Comfort Women” - Who sold us down the river?
Eine Zusammenfassende Darstellung des Problems "Trostfrauen"

27.3.2007
Erklärung der Frauen-Kommission des NCCJ

13.4.2007
Der Brief der PROK-Frauen an die Partnerkrichen in den USA.
Bericht dazu.

 

Texte aus den Hearings im US-Kongress

Resolution 121 (31.1.2007)
Rep. M. HONDA aus California brachte die Resolution 121 im Kongress ein

Resolution 121 mit Einführung durch Honda

Resolution 121 mit japanischer Übersetzung

Statements (15.2.2007):
M. Honda
M. Kotler
J. O'Here

Appeal - Center for Research and Documentation on Japan's War Responsibility

 

Reaktionen in Japan

ABE's Violent Denial. A. Dudden & K. MIZOGUCHI

Japan Anger at US Sex Slave Bill. BBC News

"Trostfrauen": alle Beiträge