Rugao - Zhou Fenying is a living witness to the dark history that still
poisons China's relations with Japan more than 60 years after World War Two.
 Zhou Fenying (R) breaks
decades of silence to speak of her horrible experience as a "comform
woman". [Yangzi Evening News]
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When Zhou was 22, Japanese soldiers came to her village in eastern China,
grabbed her and her sister-in-law and carted them off to a military brothel, she
says.
Now 91, Zhou has broken decades of silence to speak of her traumatic
experience as a "comfort woman" -- the euphemism the invading Japanese used to
describe women forced into sex slavery.
"I hid with my husband's sister under a millstone. Later, the Japanese
soldiers discovered us and pulled us out by our legs. They tied us both to their
vehicle. Later they used more ropes to tie and secure us and drove us away," she
told Reuters in her home village in Jiangsu province.
"They then took us to the 'comfort woman lodge'. There was nothing good
there," she said, speaking through a local government official who struggled to
translate her thick dialect into Mandarin.
"For four to five hours a day, it was torture. They gave us food afterwards,
but every day we cried and we just did not want to eat it," Zhou added, sitting
in her sparsely decorated home.
The Chinese government says Japan has yet to atone properly for its war
crimes, which included massacres and forcing people to work as virtual slaves in
factories or as prostitutes.
In 2005, a push by Japan for a permanent UN Security Council seat sparked
anti-Japanese street protests in cities across China, with demonstrators
denouncing Tokyo and demanding compensation and an apology for the war.
"Of Course I Hate Them"
Zhou -- neatly dressed in a dark blue traditional Chinese shirt, her graying
hair combed back into a bun -- avoided saying what had happened to her in the
brothel, except that she was there with at least 20 other Chinese women.
But her son, Jiang Weixun, 62, said she had told him they were repeatedly
raped by Japanese soldiers on a daily basis.
This harrowing experience has left a deep scar on Zhou's life. She cannot
forget, and nor can she forgive.
"If it were you, wouldn't you hate them? Of course I hate them. But after the
war, all the Japanese went home. I'm already so old. I think they are all dead
by now," Zhou said.
Zhou said she had served as a "comfort woman" for two months before a local
town official rescued her by paying off the Japanese.
She went back to her husband of 10 years, Ni Jincheng, who later died
fighting the Japanese.
Zhou remarried and lives with her son, Jiang, from her second marriage.
Jiang said his mother had been moved to tell her story after learning of the
death of Lei Guiying, a well-known former Chinese comfort woman.
Lei died of a brain hemorrhage in April. She had gone public with her
experiences last year after hiding the ordeal from her family for 60 years.
Jiang said he was not ashamed of his mother, one of only an estimated 50
former Chinese sex slaves still alive today.
He said her experiences should highlight to the world the extent of the
wartime crimes committed by the Japanese.
"When my mother told me about this, as her son, I do not hate her for that.
The Japanese are the ones I should be hating. The Japanese are those who
committed the crimes. The Japanese are responsible for this, they raped all of
the women," he said.
Tokyo has not paid direct compensation to any of the estimated 200,000 mostly
Asian women forced to work in brothels for the Japanese military before and
during World War Two, saying all claims were settled by peace treaties that
ended the war.
Instead, in 1995, Tokyo set up the Asian Women's Fund, a
private group with heavy government support, to make cash payments to surviving
wartime sex slaves.