Testimonies
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- The Story of Bae Bong-gi – “We luckily managed to survive amid that war.”
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In her book <The House with a Red Tile Roof - The Story of Korean Women Who Became the Japanese Military "Comfort Women"> which was translated into Korean in 2014, Kawata Fumiko vividly yet calmly unraveled the testimony of Bae Bong-gi, one of the Korean "Comfort Women" who was taken to Okinawa. Based on the testimonies and data collected from Okinawa residents, Japanese soldiers, as well as Bae Bong-gi, this article describes the detailed circumstances experienced by Bae Bong-gi and the “Comfort Women” surrounding the U.S. military’s air raids that took place on the Kerama Islands, Okinawa.
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- The story of Song Shin-do – “We have not the slightest idea of what a person thinks inside.”
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This article is about the story of Song Shin-do remembered by Kawata Fumiko, who connected Song Shin-do to the ‘”Comfort Women” 110 Report Call Executive Committee’.
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- [A special edition for the International Memorial Day for "Comfort Women"] Remembering Kim Hak-sun
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Written by Lee Hee-ja, President of the Association for Requesting Compensation for the Pacific War Victims
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- Remembering Kim Hak-sun 4 - Dear Hak-sun, how are you doing in heaven now?
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Written by Nobukawa Mitsuko (信川美津子), Civic Activist
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- Remembering Bae Bong-ki
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she said, with tears streaming down her cheeks, when a Japanese journalist suggested they go back and visit her old home together. Away for so long from her hometown in South Chungcheong Province – a place which she could now only dream about.