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September 25, 2013 THE VILLADOM TIMES
The comfort women &
the uncomfortable truth
As you read this, thousands of young Korean women
and girls are being coerced into lives as prostitutes and
concubines. The perpetrators this time are Chinese.
Hannah Song, a graduate of Northern Highlands
Regional High School is now the president and CEO of
LINK (Liberty in North Korea), a group based in Cali-
fornia that helps rescue and resettle North Koreans who
flee to northern China and find themselves confronted
with prostitution of one type or another. The alternative is
being sent back to North Korea for torture, execution, or
prison camps that have lasted, in Song’s own words, twice
as long as the Soviet Gulag and five times as long as the
Nazi death camps.
How do the Chinese cope with Song and her one-
woman onslaught of honesty, backed by a number of other
Korean-Americans and sympathetic white Yalies? They
dug up and dusted off a Japanese outrage that took place
in the middle of the last century and promoted it as typical
of the culture that gave the world Pearl Harbor along with
Hello Kitty, Totoro, Midori, and half of Alan Gilbert.
Around Bergen County and in various places in Cali-
fornia, pressure groups are asking that monuments be
authorized to the “comfort women,” Korean and other
Asian women coerced into military brothels by the Japa-
nese during World War II.
The comfort women are generally described as “sex
slaves.” The idea generated is that Japanese soldiers
swooped down on villages and carried off young girls for
a life of prostitution, probably followed by murder.
This is hokum. The Japanese did recruit women as
prostitutes, but the prime booking agents were the Korean
National Police and the debt-ridden families of the girls.
Bruce Cumings, an American college professor at the
University of Chicago is married to a Korean woman.
Cumings is a critic of both North and South Korea, and
gave the comfort woman issue three pages in his book,
“Korea’s Place in the Sun.” Cumings, no friend of Japan,
alluded to the fact that no Korean woman was handed
over to Japanese custody without the compliance of fellow
Koreans. Contract prostitution for family debt was an old,
ugly part of Asian culture in China and Japan in the years
before the Japanese annexed Korea.
The Koreans circa 1910 were not as familiar with pros-
titution as the Chinese or the Japanese were. In traditional
Korea, family contract marriage generally conferred mar-
riageable daughters on mature men of any age who seemed
respectable and offered financial inducement to the girls’
parents. Men with no money were out of luck, while rich
men sometimes had any number of lawful wives.
Independent Korea had many harems and not many
brothels, though both existed before the Japanese arrived.
The Japanese outlawed polygamy in 1880, and the ban for-
mally fell on Korea in 1910, though it was widely ignored
in both countries. The ban and its aftermath -- more broth-
els and fewer harems -- was part of the Japanese coloniza-
tion of Korea that also opened the first hospitals, banks,
and public schools Korea had ever seen. The Koreans
sang sad songs about the brothels, but studied hard in the
schools. What was the life of a comfort woman like? A U.S.
Army technical corporal named Alex Yorichi interviewed
20 comfort women at the Ledo Stockade in Burma in 1944
after they were captured while serving with the Japanese
Army. The report is available online. Yorichi was a Japa-
nese-American, but the fact that he joined the U.S. Army
when 110,000 of his fellow Japanese-Americans were
behind barbed wire in American Relocation Camps shows
whose side he was on.
“The majority of the girls were ignorant and unedu-
cated, though a few had been connected with ‘the oldest
profession on earth’ before...the contract they signed
bound them to Army regulations and to the ‘house master’
for a period of from six months to a year depending on
the family debt for which they were advanced...They lived
well because their food and material (were) not heavily
rationed and they had plenty of money with which to
purchase desired articles...They were able to buy clothes,
shoes, cigarettes, and cosmetics to supplement the many
gifts given to them by soldiers who had received ‘comfort
bags’ from home...While in Burma they amused them-
selves by participating in sports events with both officers
and men, and attended picnics, entertainment, and social
dinners. They had a phonograph, and in the towns they
were allowed to go shopping.”
The girls soon learned what they were there for, and the
conditions were arduous.
“The girls were allowed the prerogative of refusing a
customer,” Yorichi wrote. “In the later part of 1943 the
army issued orders that certain girls who had paid their
debt could return home…The interrogations showed that
the health of these girls was good...There were numerous
cases of proposals of marriage and in certain cases mar-
riages actually took place.”
How did an ugly fact of life in most Asian countries
get recycled into the kidnapping, rape, and murder of a
whole nation of innocents? Some contemporary Japanese
newsmen discovered that most Koreans they spoke to in
California were rather apathetic about the whole thing.
The organizational support came from a Chinese-sup-
ported organization known in English as The Alliance for
Preserving the Truth about the Sino-Japanese War. This
group apparently came to life shortly after the Chinese
suffered the international embarrassment of Tianamen
Square. The first fruits of Tianamen in terms of Chinese pro-
paganda was the revitalized interest in the 1937 Japanese
Rape of Nanking, a staple of U.S. propaganda during World
War II which Iris Chang, a Chinese-American, described
as “The Forgotten Holocaust of the Pacific.” The Alliance
for Preserving the Truth about the Sino-Japanese War
takes pride in having provided Chang with much of her
information. Since much of the source material was either
III • Page 17
in Japanese or German, and Chang could not read those
languages, they essentially took over her literary life. The
Chinese numbers for murders and rapes are impossible.
The Nanking Safety Zone Committee of American, Brit-
ish, German, and Danish humanitarians who were there --
the Chinese Nationalist generals ran for it and abandoned
their own soldiers -- signed off on 360 rapes and 25,000
deaths either from battle or the massacre of soldier prison-
ers caught out of uniform. Chinese figures are 300,000
murders -- not battle deaths -- and 20,000 to 80,000 rapes.
There were 200,000 people in Nanking, and most of them
lived. Do the math.
Chang claimed the Japanese never apologized for
Nanking and that Nanking had never been mentioned
in Japanese schoolbooks. A couple of Japanese report-
ers sleuthed into a public gathering where Chang was
speaking to hundreds of Chinese-American admirers and
showed everybody present a number of Japanese middle-
school schoolbooks that mentioned the Nanking Massacre
in considerable detail. Japan apologized four times and
the officer deemed responsible was hanged. One of the
confessed Japanese Nanking rapists shortly turned out to
have been an eccentric leftist drafted in 1940. He was still
in Japan when Nanking fell.
A key Japanese historian who supported the Nanking
story was demonstrably anti-American and called the U.S.
war in Vietnam an act of genocide. Some of the Nanking
atrocity photos in the book were taken elsewhere and
others were obvious fakes.
After having an autistic child and suffering from
overwork on another Japan-bashing book, Chang, who
probably initially believed what her communist Chinese
handlers told her, shot herself.
The current comfort woman imbroglio is more of the
same. The Japanese outrage should never have happened,
but it was consistent with Asian culture at that time. Kore-
ans were widely complicit. The details and the numbers
are simulated. The stimulus is probably the widespread
Chinese sexual mistreatment of North Korean refugees
and the general dissatisfaction many thinking Chinese
feel for their government.
A recent PBS show depicted two Chinese freelance
newsmen, “Temple Tiger” and “Zola,” who use cell phone
cameras and texting to produce honest news reports about
environmental catastrophes and abuse of citizens. These
two risk evictions, beatings, and “disappearance” to do so.
They are real heroes.
People who want to bring comfort to the modern “com-
fort women” stranded in China should support LINK, not
build monuments to dubiously reported events that took
place 75 years ago in another country.
Finger-pointing, like finger-painting, is best outgrown
-- especially when the “facts” come from foreign propa-
gandists. Watch out for one-sided atrocity stories. Only
one side needs them.
Letters to the Editor
Superintendent speaks out
Dear Editor:
Most local taxpayers are aware that much of the tax
money we send to Trenton goes to subsidize other school
districts. Coming up very soon, we will have an opportu-
nity to vote to use some of the state funds on a project in
our own district.
On Tuesday, Sept. 24, we will vote on funding a new
roof for Northern Highlands Regional High School. The
total cost of removing and completely replacing the roof
is $2.76 million, but the state has committed to contribute
40 percent of the cost, a total of $1.1 million, through debt
service aid.
If we don’t approve this new roof, we will lose this
opportunity and this state money.
Because the number of questions I’ve been asked, I want
to provide some further information about the state of the
school’s roof and the reason we need to move forward now
to take care of the problem. Here are some important facts
about the current roof: It dates from 1965, when the build-
ing was erected, and 1974 when the school was expanded,
making it far beyond its useful life span. There are dozens
of large puddles of standing water on the roof and quanti-
ties of plant growth, including moss and algae. Although
the four-acre roof has been repeatedly patched, leaks have
caused major damage to rugs, ceiling tiles, wiring, and
floors, especially in the library and auditorium, where
buckets are a common sight.
The old roof will be completely removed and the new
roof will be energy-efficient, solar-ready, and equipped
with a 35-year warranty. Please join me in supporting this
much-needed improvement that will maintain our facility
as one of the premier schools in Bergen County and keep
your tax dollars here in your school district where they
belong. John Keenan, Superintendent
Northern Highlands Regional High School
Allendale Supports school roof referendum
Dear Editor:
We are writing as parents of children in Reynolds and
Bogert schools, school leaders, and sales associates at a
reputable local real estate company (Terrie O’Connor Real
Estate). We acknowledge that there are many factors that
go into a family’s decision to purchase a home in a specific
area, and the quality of the local schools is a large factor.
The fact that Northern Highlands Regional High School
is one of New Jersey’s top rated high schools is well known.
We both know firsthand that homes are purchased in the
four towns because of Highlands’ superb reputation.
That being said, the safety and well-being of the students
in the school cannot be overlooked. The roof at the school
is over 50 years old and is beyond repair. There has been
significant damage to rugs, ceiling tiles, wiring, and floors
with major leaks in the library, auditorium, hallways, stair-
wells, and cafeteria. Whenever one leak is repaired,
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