This is a book about the “comfort women,” women who were forced to have sex with Japanese soldiers. The subtitle is Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military During World War II. (Minor complaint here; the cover of the book at the bottom, and the color of font used for the subtitle is almost the same, making it rather difficult to read the subtitle.)
The issue is still in current news, as more and more information about what was done to obtain the women and what happened to them while they worked in the “comfort stations” comes to life. The actual number of comfort women is not known; the book says it was around 50,000 at a minimum, and 200,000 at the higher range. Korean and Chinese woman formed the bulk of the group, along with Southeast Asian women and some Japanese women. There were also at least 1000 of the comfort stations.
In Shanghai, the first comfort stations were passed off as restaurants in order to get around the Chinese prostitution laws. By the end of 1936, there were ten of the stations established. Women were examined to determine if they had contracted any sexual diseases.
The Army, never one to really get along well with the Navy, established their own comfort stations. They were established, supposedly, in order to “prevent rapes by military personnel.” In other words, the soldiers taking over an area were going to use women for sex, period. They would either rape them, or use the comfort stations.
The very first station was set up in March of 1933 in Northeast China, using 35 Korean women and three Japanese women.
“...the Brigade Headquarters relentlessly warned soldiers to check prostitutes' health certificates, to use condoms and 'Secret Star Cream' disinfecting lubricant, and to wash their genitals with disinfectant after going to the comfort stations.”
The number of comfort stations increased quickly, especially in China. This was supposed to take some political pressure off the Japanese military.
Around 1939 there were 7 naval comfort stations in Shanghai, along with an unknown number of army comfort women. There were 4 comfort stations and 36 comfort women in Hangchow; 24 stations with 250 women in Jiujiang; 6 stations and 70 women in Wuhu; 20 stations and 395 women in Wuhan, and 11 stations and 111 women in Nanchang. That's 72 comfort stations just in that small number of cities, so the total number was probably rather large.
Examining some documents from the time, the author says that “In short, military comfort stations were considered essential to raising the morale of the troops; maintaining military discipline; preventing looting, rape, arson and the massacring of prisoners, and preventing sexually transmitted diseases.”
Comfort women were obtain by the military rounding them up, by police rounding them up, and by shysters who tricked the women by saying they had a good job (or something) waiting for them and, when the woman showed up, she was taken and used as a comfort woman.
The stations were supposed to stop rapes, but the author writes “..we find that there were no occupied areas in which rapes stopped.”
Another reason comfort stations were established was the way the Japanese military used its men. They were kept in the field for long time periods with little if any vacation at all. In the barracks the soldiers were routinely hit and beaten by their superiors. They daily lives were lived in crude facilities. Thus, they were primed to be abusive towards others, including women.
Yet another reason for the comfort stations was that the military was afraid the soldiers would tell military secrets to prostitutes and that wouldn't happen if regular comfort stations, under the control of the military, were set up.
Comfort stations were set up in China, Hong Kong, French Indochina, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, British Borneo, the Dutch East Indies, Burma, Thailand, New Guinea, the Okinawan archipelago, the Bonin Islands, Hokkaido, the Kurile Islands, Sakhalin, the Truck Islands, Koror Island, Taiwan, Saipan, Guam, and the Indian Nicobar Islands.
In other words, wherever the military went, the stations were set up. (With one exception, apparently. The Japanese did take and hold, for a while, a couple of the Alaskan islands, but, as far as I have read, no stations were set up there.)
How did women get out of the comfort station system? They committed suicide, escaped, were injured or killed in battles (the comfort stations were near the front lines), and illness. Some of them had actual contracts to do that kind of work and, when they were fulfilled, they left.
Some captured Australian nurses were forced to serve as comfort women.
A chapter goes into exactly how comfort stations were designed and constructed. There were also various regulations that had to be followed.
How many men did a comfort woman “service” in a day? Apparently it depended on if the women were primarily servicing officers, or were serving common soldiers. The latter group would have to service from around 20 to 30 different men in a single day. They also did not have any scheduled days off.
Then the Japanese lost the war and the comfort stations disappeared.
Not.
The Japanese had been led to believe that the American soldiers would horribly mistreat the civilians (just as the Japanese military had mistreated the civilians of all the areas it took over). Some women were even evacuated from the cities. On August 18th, the Japanese government stated construction of comfort stations for the Allied troops, which began their occupation of Japan on August 28.
Japan set up the stations all over the country, and got about 1360 women to work in them. On March 26, 1946, U.S. 8th Army Headquarters put out an order for the soldiers to stop using any places where prostitution was conducted.
The book then goes into how the comfort women suffered even after the war had ended and they no longer had to work in the comfort stations.