Posted in

What Did Japanese Soldiers Do With “Comfort Women” in WW2? *Warning REAL FOOTAGE


“What Did Japanese Soldiers Do  With ‘Comfort Women’ in WW2?”   For years, many believed Japanese expansion  during World War II was mainly about control.

But   not later, something far darker began  unfolding behind the front lines.

Young   women started disappearing from villages, often  promised ordinary jobs before being pulled into a   secret military system that would leave lifelong  scars on thousands of victims.

It starts in the early 1930s, when the Japanese  Empire was growing fast and violently.

Japan had   already modernized its military and wanted more  land, more resources, and more power across Asia.

In 1931, Japanese forces invaded Manchuria in  northeastern China.

A few years later, in 1937,   full-scale war broke out between Japan and  China after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident   near Beijing.

What followed became one of  the bloodiest wars in Asian history.

As Japanese troops pushed deeper into China,  stories of mass killings, r*pe, torture,   and looting began spreading everywhere.

One of the  most infamous events happened in late 1937 during   the capture of Nanjing, then the capital of China.

During what became known as the Nanjing Massacre,   Japanese soldiers murdered huge numbers of  civilians and prisoners of war.

Estimates   place the death toll between 200,000  and 300,000 people.

Tens of thousands   of women were r*ped during those weeks.

The violence terrified not only civilians but   also Japanese military leaders themselves.

Officers worried that uncontrolled r*pe by   soldiers was damaging Japan’s image overseas  and creating stronger resistance among occupied   populations.

Some military officials also  feared that soldiers visiting ordinary   prostitutes could spread se*ually transmitted  diseases through the army.

Out of these fears,   the Japanese military began creating what they  called “comfort stations.

” The women forced into   these places became known as “comfort women.

” The term itself sounds harmless today,   but the reality behind it was horrifying.

These  were military brothels controlled directly or   indirectly by the Japanese armed forces.

Women  and girls were forced to provide s*x to soldiers   day after day.

Many historians today describe  the system as one of the largest organized   systems of se*ual slavery in modern history.

The first comfort stations appeared in Shanghai   around 1932 after fighting between Japanese  and Chinese forces.

At first, some of the women   involved were Japanese prostitutes already working  overseas.

But as the war expanded across Asia, the   system grew far beyond that.

The military needed  thousands more women.

Soon, recruiters, brokers,   police, and soldiers themselves began targeting  vulnerable women from occupied territories.

Most of the victims came from Korea, which had  been under Japanese colonial rule since 1910.

Korea became the biggest source of comfort women  because Japan had total control there.

Recruiters   promised poor families that their daughters  would receive factory jobs, nursing work,   cooking jobs, or opportunities overseas.

Many  girls were teenagers.

Some were barely in their   mid-teens.

Others were kidnapped outright.

Women were also taken from China, the Philippines,   Taiwan, Indonesia, Burma, Malaya, Vietnam,  and even Dutch women captured in the Dutch   East Indies, which is modern Indonesia  today.

Historians estimate that somewhere   between 50,000 and over 200,000 women  may have been trapped in the system,   though exact numbers remain impossible to prove  because many wartime records were destroyed.

The Japanese military did not simply “allow”  the system.

Documents later discovered showed   that army officials organized transportation,  controlled medical inspections, built stations,   and regulated the movement of women.

In  many places, local commanders directly   supervised the facilities.

As Japan’s war spread during the late 1930s   and early 1940s, the military needed more and  more women for its growing network of comfort   stations.

Japanese forces were now fighting across  massive areas of Asia and the Pacific.

Soldiers   were stationed in remote jungles, islands,  occupied cities, and frontline camps.

Wherever   troops went, comfort stations often followed.

In Korea, recruiters became extremely active.

Some   worked privately, while others cooperated closely  with police or colonial officials.

Poor families   were especially vulnerable because Korea, during  Japanese rule, was filled with poverty, land   seizures, forced labor, and discrimination.

A Korean teenager named Kim Hak-sun later became   one of the first former comfort women  to publicly tell her story in the early   1990s.

She described being taken at age  17 after being promised work.

Instead,   she was sent into military se*ual slavery.

In China, the situation was often even more   brutal.

Japanese troops conducting military  operations sometimes seized women directly   during raids on villages.

In occupied regions,  soldiers kidnapped girls from streets or homes.

Families that resisted could be beaten or  killed.

Chinese women were frequently viewed   by Japanese soldiers as enemies connected  to anti-Japanese resistance movements, which   often led to especially cruel treatment.

In the Philippines, many women were taken during   anti-guerrilla operations.

Filipino resistance  fighters were actively attacking Japanese forces   throughout the war, and civilians were often  accused of helping them.

Some girls were locked   inside small military buildings near garrisons  where soldiers assaulted them daily.

Indonesia saw another side of the system after  Japan defeated Dutch colonial forces in 1942.

Japanese authorities imprisoned many European  civilians, including Dutch families.

Some Dutch   women were later forced into comfort stations.

One famous case involved Jan Ruff-O’Herne, a Dutch   teenager who survived repeated assaults after  being taken from an internment camp in Java.

In some places, local collaborators helped  identify vulnerable girls.

Human trafficking   networks expanded quickly because the  Japanese military wanted a steady supply   of women near military bases.

For many comfort women, the moment they arrived   at a station was the moment they realized  escape would be nearly impossible.

Most stations were heavily controlled military  facilities.

Some were ordinary buildings converted   into brothels.

Others were small wooden  huts near battle zones.

In crowded cities,   stations could sit behind restaurants or military  offices.

In jungle areas, they might be hidden   beside army camps surrounded by guards.

Women were usually given small rooms with   thin bedding and little privacy.

Many stations  had strict schedules organized by soldiers or   military police.

In some places, women were  forced to service dozens of soldiers every   single day.

Survivors later described endless  lines of men waiting outside their rooms,   especially before military offensives or  after soldiers returned from combat.

Medical inspections became a routine part of life.

Japanese military doctors regularly examined women   for se*ually transmitted infections because  commanders feared diseases spreading among   troops.

But these inspections were not  done for the women’s health or safety.

Women suffering injuries, infections, or severe  bleeding were often still forced to continue.

Violence was constant.

Soldiers beat women who  resisted, cried, or failed to follow orders.

Some   victims were burned with cigarettes, stabbed, or  tortured.

Pregnancies became another terrifying   issue.

Some women were forced to undergo  crude abortions under terrible conditions.

Others were injected with drugs or chemicals.

Food shortages were common, especially later in   the war.

In remote stations, women survived on  tiny amounts of rice and soup while soldiers   received military rations first.

Diseases  spread quickly in overcrowded camps.

Malaria,   dysentery, tuberculosis, and  infections killed many women.

The psychological damage was just as severe.

Many survivors later said they felt completely   cut off from humanity.

They were isolated  in foreign countries, unable to speak the   local language, surrounded by armed men, and  constantly threatened with violence.

Some women attempted escape.

A few succeeded  with help from local civilians or resistance   fighters.

But many escape attempts ended in  brutal punishment or death.

In some areas,   Japanese troops executed women  suspected of trying to flee.

The system also varied depending  on location and commanders.

A few survivors later recalled rare moments where  individual soldiers showed small acts of kindness,   like secretly giving extra food or medicine.

But  those moments never changed the overall reality.

The women remained prisoners trapped inside  a system built around organized abuse.

As the Pacific War intensified after 1941,  conditions became even worse.

Japan attacked Pearl   Harbour in December 1941, bringing the United  States fully into World War II.

Soon, Japanese   forces were fighting massive battles across  the Pacific against American, British, Chinese,   Australian, and Allied troops.

By 1943, the tide of war had started turning   against Japan.

American forces were advancing  across the Pacific island by island.

Japanese   troops were suffering heavy losses in places  like Guadalcanal and New Guinea.

In China,   fighting dragged on endlessly.

Supplies grew  weaker, transportation became dangerous,   and military discipline began  breaking apart in some areas.

For comfort women trapped near combat zones,  this period became even more deadly.

In earlier years, many comfort stations operated  behind relatively stable front lines.

But now,   battlefields moved constantly.

Allied bombings  destroyed roads, ports, and military bases.

Japanese units retreated through jungles and  mountains while carrying wounded soldiers   and limited supplies.

Women trapped  inside the comfort system were often   forced to move alongside the army.

Some women marched long distances through   tropical forests with little food or medical care.

Sick or injured women sometimes could not keep   up.

Survivors later described seeing abandoned  women left behind to die during retreats.

In the Philippines, conditions became  especially horrific during the final years   of Japanese occupation.

Filipino guerrilla  fighters were launching attacks across the   islands while American forces prepared to  return.

Japanese troops grew increasingly   paranoid and violent toward civilians.

Some  comfort women were locked inside military   compounds and assaulted repeatedly while nearby  towns suffered massacres and destruction.

In Burma, now Myanmar, Japanese troops faced  brutal fighting against British and Indian   forces.

The jungle climate itself killed  huge numbers of soldiers through disease and   starvation.

Comfort women trapped there endured  the same misery.

Some later described living in   collapsing huts filled with mosquitoes,  infections, and wounded soldiers.

As defeat became more likely, Japanese commanders  also started destroying records connected to the   comfort station system.

Documents were  burned, military files disappeared,   and witnesses were silenced.

This later made it  harder for historians to calculate exact numbers   or fully trace how the system operated.

In some places, Japanese troops murdered comfort   women before retreating.

Soldiers feared that  captured women could testify about military   crimes to Allied forces.

There are accounts  from different regions of women being shot,   stabbed, or abandoned during evacuations.

Others died during Allied bombings or naval   attacks while being transported by Japanese ships.

These transport vessels were already overcrowded   with troops and supplies.

When American submarines  attacked, prisoners and comfort women often had   almost no chance of escape.

Yet despite everything, some women   survived through extraordinary luck  and determination.

A few escaped   during battles when guards fled.

Others were  rescued by local resistance groups or Allied   soldiers advancing into occupied territories.

But survival did not mean freedom from suffering.

Many women emerged from the war physically  destroyed, traumatized, and unable to return   to normal life.

Some were still teenagers when  the war ended, yet already carried years of   abuse and disease.

Then, in August 1945,   everything changed suddenly.

The United States dropped atomic bombs   on the Japanese cities of Atomic bombings of  Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Days later, the Soviet   Union invaded Japanese-controlled Manchuria.

Japan  announced its surrender on August 15, 1945.

World War II was over.

Asia was filled with chaos.

Cities   were destroyed, governments had collapsed,  transportation systems barely worked,   and millions of people were stranded far from  home.

Former comfort women suddenly found   themselves abandoned across battle zones, occupied  territories, and ruined military camps.

Some women were rescued by Allied forces.

Others wandered through villages searching   for food or help.

Many had no money, no  documents, and no idea how to get home.

For Korean women, returning home could take  months or even years.

Korea itself had just   been freed from decades of Japanese colonial  rule, but the country was unstable and divided   between Soviet and American occupation  zones.

Transportation across East Asia   was devastated.

Some survivors crossed borders  on foot.

Others depended on refugee ships.

Many women returned carrying severe injuries or  illnesses.

Se*ually transmitted infections were   common.

Some women could no longer have children  because of repeated abuse, forced abortions,   or untreated medical complications.

Others  suffered permanent pain from the violence they   experienced during captivity.

But the emotional wounds   often cut even deeper.

In many Asian societies during the 1940s,   se*ual assault carried enormous stigma.

Women  who had been forced into comfort stations were   often treated with shame instead of sympathy.

Some families rejected daughters who returned.

Others refused to discuss what happened.

Many survivors stayed silent for decades because   they feared being blamed or humiliated.

Some  married without ever telling their husbands.

Others lived completely isolated lives.

A large number never married at all.

In Korea, former comfort women were largely  ignored after the war because the country soon   faced another catastrophe: the Korean War.

The  war devastated the Korean Peninsula and pushed   many personal wartime stories into silence.

In China, survivors also rarely spoke publicly.

China itself was entering a civil  war between Communist and Nationalist   forces.

Villages destroyed during the  Japanese occupation focused on survival,   not documenting the experiences of women.

In the Philippines and Indonesia, many survivors   disappeared into poverty.

Some worked low-paying  jobs for the rest of their lives while hiding   their past from neighbors and relatives.

Meanwhile, Japan, after World War II,   rebuilt itself rapidly under American occupation.

The country focused heavily on economic recovery   and political reconstruction.

Discussions  about wartime crimes often remained limited   during the early postwar decades.

The comfort women issue slowly faded   from public conversation internationally.

Many records had been destroyed.

Survivors   remained silent.

Governments focused on Cold  War politics rather than wartime justice.

For years, countless victims believed the world  would never know what happened to them.

But in the late 1980s, researchers and activists  in South Korea and Japan began uncovering more   evidence about the military system.

Then came a major turning point.

In 1991, Kim Hak-sun publicly testified in South  Korea about being forced into a comfort station   during the war.

Her testimony shocked many  people because she described in detail how   young girls had been deceived, transported, and  repeatedly assaulted by Japanese soldiers.

Soon, other survivors came forward from Korea,  China, the Philippines, the Netherlands,   and elsewhere.

Elderly women who had spent  decades hiding their trauma suddenly began   speaking publicly at press conferences,  lawsuits, and international hearings.

Historians also discovered wartime Japanese  military documents showing direct military   involvement in organizing comfort stations.

These  findings weakened earlier claims that private   businesses alone had operated the system.

In 1993, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei   Kono issued what became known as the Kono  Statement.

The statement acknowledged that   the Japanese military had been involved in  the establishment and management of comfort   stations and admitted that many women  were recruited against their will.

For many survivors, however, the statement  did not go far enough.

They wanted formal   legal responsibility, direct government  compensation, and a clearer apology   from the Japanese state itself.

During the 1990s, lawsuits were filed   against the Japanese government in Japanese  courts and internationally.

Former comfort   women demanded recognition and justice for what  they described as wartime se*ual slavery.

Japan later helped create the Asian Women’s  Fund in 1995, which offered payments and apology   letters to some survivors using privately  raised money supported by the government.

But the fund became controversial because many  survivors believed compensation should come   officially and directly from the Japanese state,  not through a semi-private organization.

Meanwhile, historians and politicians argued  fiercely over the issue.

Some Japanese   nationalists denied coercion or claimed  the women were simply wartime prostitutes.

Survivors and many scholars strongly rejected  those claims, pointing to military documents,   testimonies, and recruitment methods involving  deception, coercion, and kidnapping.

The debate spread internationally.

The United  Nations discussed the issue multiple times.

Human   rights organizations described the comfort  women system as se*ual slavery.

Museums,   documentaries, and memorials began  appearing around the world.

Every Wednesday in Seoul, South Korea,  protests began taking place outside   the Japanese embassy.

Elderly survivors and  supporters demanded justice and remembrance.

These demonstrations continued year after  year and became one of the longest-running   protest movements in the world.

What made the issue so powerful was not   only the historical evidence.

It was the  fact that the survivors themselves were   now elderly women speaking about trauma they  had carried almost their entire lives.

Many suffered severe psychological damage long  after the war ended.

Nightmares, depression, panic   attacks, and isolation were common.

Some women  described being terrified of men for decades.

A heartbreaking number of women died before  receiving any public acknowledgment at all.

Some Japanese citizens, journalists,  historians, and activists worked hard to   preserve survivor testimonies and push for  acknowledgement.

Others believed Japan had   already apologized enough.

Political debates  over school textbooks, memorial statues,   and official statements became deeply  emotional and controversial.

In South Korea, comfort women became a  powerful national symbol connected to   the memory of Japanese colonial rule.

Memorial  statues honoring victims appeared in different   countries, including South Korea, the United  States, Germany, and the Philippines.

One famous statue, often called the “Statue of  Peace,” shows a young girl sitting quietly in   a chair beside an empty seat.

The empty chair  represents victims who never returned or never   lived long enough to tell their stories.

In 2015, Japan and South Korea reached another   agreement intended to “finally and irreversibly”  resolve the comfort women issue.

Japan contributed   funds for surviving Korean victims and expressed  renewed apologies.

But the agreement remained   controversial, especially among survivors who  felt they were not properly consulted.

Today, the comfort women issue still affects  relations between Japan and several Asian   countries.

It remains one of the most painful  unresolved memories of World War II in Asia.