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How a memorial to WWII sex slaves ignited a battle in Berlin – The Mercury News

How a memorial to WWII sex slaves ignited a battle in Berlin – The Mercury News

Max Kim | Los Angeles Times (TNS)

BERLIN — On a quiet street corner in Berlin’s Mitte district, a bronze statue of a young girl in a traditional Korean dress glitters in the sun.

Her fists are clenched, her expression tense. She is seated but her heels do not touch the ground. A shadow of an elderly woman is carved into the granite below her. Beside her is an empty chair.

To Germany’s Korean diaspora — 50,000 strong — the statue is a poignant tribute to the 200,000 so-called comfort women who were forced or tricked into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese military during World War II.

But to the Japanese government, which has never fully accepted responsibility for this dark history, the statue is propaganda meant to reignite an issue it says was settled long ago.

Cast into the middle of the conflict is the German government, which has become the target of a high-level Japanese lobbying campaign to take down the statue.

Similar fights over memorials to the comfort women have played out elsewhere — including Southern California — but the dispute has special resonance in Germany, with its own travails in coming to terms with an ugly history.

It was only in 1991 that the first former South Korean comfort woman first came forward in Seoul, setting off a swell of public testimony. Since then, over a hundred memorials have been established around the world.

“It was no small thing for these elderly women to reveal themselves as victims of sexual violence at the time,” said Nataly Jung-hwa Han, who heads Korea Verband, the Berlin-based civic group that commissioned the statue, the first on public grounds in Europe.

It is a replica of a comfort women memorial in Seoul called the Statue of Peace. Han named it “Ari,” which means brave in Armenian.

At the unveiling ceremony in 2020, she stressed that the “statue is not directed against the Japanese government” but “an invitation to come to terms with the past together for the future.”

That’s not how Japanese officials saw it. And to the surprise of many here, it appears that their four-year campaign against the statue is about to pay off.


Germany’s wartime sins are etched into Berlin.

Museums and streetside memorials pay tribute to the victims of the Holocaust. Embedded into the ground throughout the city are more than 5,000 Stolpersteine, or “stumbling stones” — each bearing the name of a person killed by the Nazis. And as in much of Europe, denying the Holocaust happened or rejecting key elements is illegal in Germany.

Japan has been far less repentant for its wartime sexual abuse of women, setting it in bitter conflict with South Korea, where the majority of former comfort women have died after decades of campaigning for official recognition.

Just eight of the 240 victims formally registered with the South Korean government are still alive. Some were as young as 12 during the war.

The Japanese government has continued to dispute the term “sex slave,” claiming that there was no evidence of force being used, as well as the 200,000 estimate that is widely cited by historians and includes some victims from China, the Philippines and other places that Japan occupied during the war.

Japan has long considered the issue resolved with an apology in 1993 — in which the government pledged “never to repeat the same mistake by forever engraving such issues in our memories” — and a controversial 2015 agreement with South Korea.

Alongside offers of monetary compensation to victims, then-Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe expressed “his most sincere apologies and remorse.”

But the agreement, which included South Korea promising to refrain from publicly criticizing Japan over the issue, did not have buy-in from the victims and allowed the Japanese government to stop short of admitting full responsibility.

“The 2015 settlement is representative of this mentality of wanting to draw a line under the past and moving on with your life,” said Dorothea Mladenova, a scholar of Japan at the University of Leipzig.

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