New 4-Volume History Illuminates Japan’s WWII ‘Comfort Women’ System
A new four-volume history of Japan’s wartime ‘comfort women’ system was unveiled at a Shanghai symposium, drawing on 30 years of pan-Asia research to illuminate a suppressed past.
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A new four-volume history of Japan’s wartime ‘comfort women’ system was unveiled at a Shanghai symposium, drawing on 30 years of pan-Asia research to illuminate a suppressed past.
Nearly a century later, we remember the Chinese mainland ‘comfort women’ tragedy: over 2,100 stations and 400,000 victims across 11 Asian countries and regions during WWII.
A concise look at WWII’s horrific ‘comfort women’ system and forced labor across Asia, highlighting survivor testimonies and the ongoing call for recognition and justice.
Discover Taipei’s Ama Museum, which documents the stories of 59 comfort women in Taiwan region with 5,000+ oral histories, photos, films and artifacts, preserving WWII human rights history.