BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18777715
SEQUENCE:18901960
CREATED:20150917T033100Z
DESCRIPTION:Public Events To Welcome Grandma Yong Soo Lee, WW 2 "Comfort Women" 
 Survivor\n\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:\n\nSupervisor Eric Mar's Schedule Of 
 Public Events To Welcome Grandma Yong Soo Lee, WW 2 "Comfort Women" 
 Survivor\nWednesday, September 16, 2015\nContact: Victor Lim, 
 415-260-1096\n\n***MEDIA ADVISORY*** \n\nSUPERVISOR ERIC MAR’S SCHEDULE 
 OF PUBLIC EVENTS FOR\n\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 
 2015\n\n\n\n1:00PM\n\nSupervisor Mar will hold a press conference with 
 members of the “Comfort Women” Coalition, joined by community 
 organizations and leaders to welcome Grandma Yong Soo Lee, WWII “Comfort 
 Women” survivor.  Grandma Lee will share her personal experiences as 
 victim of sexual slavery captured the Japanese Imperial Army for two years 
 at a Kamikaze unit in colonial Taiwan.\n\n\n\nMembers of the “Comfort 
 Women Coalition”, with representatives from the Chinese, Korean, Filipino 
 and other leaders from community organizations will express their support 
 in passing Supervisor Mar’s resolution to build a “Comfort Women” 
 memorial in San Francisco.\n\n\n\nLocation:   City Hall of San Franciso, 
 Room 278, Conference Room\n\nThe following members and organizations will 
 join Supervisor Mar:\n\nGrandma Yong Soo Lee, Korean “Comfort Women” 
 survivor, and women’s rights activist\n\nLillian Sing, Rape of Nanjing 
 Redress Coalition\n\nJulie Tang, Rape of Nanjing Redress Coalition\n\nJulie 
 Soo, Commissioner, San Francisco Commission on the Status of 
 Women\n\nPhyllis Kim, Executive Director of the Korean American Forum of 
 California\n\nKathy Masaoka, Nikkei for Civil Rights and 
 Redress-LA\n\nOther leaders from Asian American community 
 organizations\n\nNote: Supervisor’s schedule is subject to 
 change.\n\nCOMFORT WOMEN COALITION\nA MULTI-ETHIC HUMAN RIGHTS 
 COLLABORATION\n\n\n\nMEDIA ALERT\n\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                   
                   CONTACT:  Miho Kim Lee\nSeptember 15, 2015                
                                               
 comfortwomencoalition(at)gmail.com        (510) 823-9514\n\n\nWHAT:      
 Press Conference with the Comfort Women Coalition and an 87-year-old 
 “comfort woman” survivor in advance of a San Francisco Board of 
 Supervisors Committee Hearing to Support a “Comfort Women” Memorial in 
 San Francisco\n\nWHEN:       Thursday, September 17, 2015, 1:00 
 PM\n\nWHERE:    San Francisco City Hall, 1 Dr. Carlton Goodlett Place, Room 
 278\n                 San Francisco, CA 94102\nWHO:       \n·      Comfort 
 Women Coalition, a San Francisco-based multi-ethic coalition of human 
 rights advocates, interfaith leaders, and community organizations\n·      
 Yongsoo Lee, an 87-year-old “comfort woman” survivor from Korea\n·     
  Rita Semel, founder, San Francisco Interfaith Council\n·      Jeff 
 Adachi, San Francisco Public Defender\n·      Hydra Mendoza, Commissioner, 
 San Francisco Board of Education\n\n\nSAN FRANCISCO, CA –   The San 
 Francisco-based Comfort Women Coalition (CWC) is joined by other human 
 rights and community organizations and leaders to urge support for a 
 “Comfort Women” Memorial in San Francisco as outlined by a resolution 
 introduced by Supervisor Eric Mar (File No. 150764) on July 14, 2015.  A 
 hearing on the resolution before the Board of Supervisors Public Safety and 
 Neighborhood Services Committee is set for September 17 and a vote before 
 the entire Board is expected on September 22.\n\nFrom the 1930s through the 
 duration of World War II, the Imperial Japanese Army instituted a 
 “comfort women” system where young women and girls were kidnapped and 
 forced into sexual slavery.  According to most international historians, 
 the term “comfort women” is a euphemism referring to the estimated 
 200,000 such victims.  A handful of survivors now in their eighties and 
 nineties still seek justice.\n\nIn 2001, the San Francisco Board of 
 Supervisors passed a resolution urging the Government of Japan, on the 50th 
 Anniversary of the U.S.-Japan Peace Treaty, to fully acknowledge and 
 apologize for Japan’s wartime atrocities and provide just compensation 
 for the surviving victims of aggression.\n\nIn 2007, the U.S. House of 
 Representatives unanimously passed Rep. Mike Honda’s bipartisan 
 resolution H.Res. 121, which also called on the Government of Japan to 
 formally acknowledge, apologize, and accept historical responsibility for 
 its Imperial Armed Forces’ coercion of young women into sexual slavery, 
 stating “the ‘comfort women’ system of forced military prostitution 
 by the Government of Japan, considered unprecedented in its cruelty and 
 magnitude, including gang rape, forced abortions, humiliation, and sexual 
 violence resulting in mutilation, death, or eventual suicide in one of the 
 largest cases of human trafficking in the 20th century.”\n\nIn 2013, the 
 San Francisco Board passed a resolution condemning Japan’s denial of its 
 system of sexual enslavement during World War II and calling for justice 
 for ‘comfort women.’\n\nIn 2014, High Commissioner Navi Pillay, the 
 U.N.’s human rights chief, stated that Japan “has failed to pursue a 
 comprehensive, impartial and lasting resolution” to address the rights of 
 so-called “comfort women.”  The U.N. Human Rights Committee called for 
 access to justice and reparations for victims and their families, the 
 disclosure of all evidence available, and education in the country 
 surrounding the issue.  The Commissioner stressed, “It is a current 
 issue, as human rights violations against these women continue to occur as 
 long as their rights to justice and reparation are not realized.”\n\nThis 
 year 2015 marks the 70th anniversary to the end of World War II (1941-1945) 
 and the Pacific War (1931-1945) and the defeat of Japanese Imperialism and 
 militarism by the Allies.\n\nSan Francisco is a city of immigrants and 
 their descendants, many of whom have ancestral ties to Asian and Pacific 
 Islander nations and have direct or indirect experience with Japan’s past 
 system of sexual enslavement.\n\nLeaders of the Japanese American community 
 continue to work closely with the broader Asian Pacific Islander community, 
 as they have in past decades, to strengthen relations and build trust, 
 understanding, and community for civil rights and social justice.\n\nIn the 
 spirit of Holocaust memorials throughout the world, CWC urges the 
 establishment of a “Comfort Women” Memorial in San Francisco, joining 
 other U.S. municipalities that have such memorials, including Glendale and 
 Rohnert Park, CA; Long Island, NY; Palisades Park and Union City, NJ; 
 Fairfax, VA; and Michigan City, MI to bring truth and reconciliation and to 
 remember the past so that people from all nations can move forward toward a 
 peaceful and secure future.  San Francisco, home to the signing of both the 
 U.N. Charter and the Peace Treaty with Japan (also known as the San 
 Francisco Treaty), is a natural place for such a memorial.\n\nThe memorial 
 will also serve as a reminder that we must collectively work to end 
 today’s human trafficking problem, exploiting an estimated 20.9 million 
 victims globally, of which 55% are women and girls.  Forced labor and human 
 trafficking worldwide is a $150 billion criminal industry and San Francisco 
 is considered a desired destination hub because of its transport 
 accessibility and its large immigrant population.\n\nFILE NO. 150764 
 RESOLUTION NO.\n\n1 [Urging the Establishment of a Memorial for "Comfort 
 Women"] 2\n\n	• 3  Resolution urging the City and County of San Francisco 
 to establish a memorial for\n\n	• 4  "Comfort Women.”\n\n5\n\n	• 6  
 WHEREAS, According to most international historians, the term “comfort 
 women”\n\n	• 7  euphemistically refers to an estimated 200,000 women 
 and young girls who were kidnapped\n\n	• 8  and forced into sexual 
 slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army during its colonial and 
 wartime\n\n	• 9  occupation of Asia and the Pacific Islands from the 
 1930s through the duration of World War\n\n	• 10  II; and\n\n	• 11  
 WHEREAS, During the 15 years of invasion and occupation of Asian 
 countries,\n\n	• 12  unspeakable and well-documented war-crimes, 
 including mass rape, wholesale massacres,\n\n	• 13  heinous torture, and 
 other atrocities, were committed by the Japanese Imperial Army\n\n	• 14  
 throughout the occupied countries and colonies; and\n\n	• 15  WHEREAS, Of 
 the few top Japanese military leaders who were investigated and\n\n	• 16  
 convicted as war criminals in the postwar War Crime Tribunals in Tokyo, 
 Nanjing, Manila,\n\n	• 17  Yokohama, and Khabarovsk, many escaped 
 prosecution; and\n\n	• 18  WHEREAS, In 2001 the San Francisco Board of 
 Supervisors passed Resolution\n\n	• 19  No. 842-01, urging the government 
 of Japan, on the 50th anniversary of the US-Japan Peace\n\n	• 20  Treaty, 
 to fully acknowledge and apologize for Japan’s wartime atrocities and 
 provide just\n\n	• 21  compensation for the surviving victims of its 
 aggression; and\n\n	• 22  WHEREAS, In 2007 the U.S. House of 
 Representatives passed Rep. Mike Honda’s\n\n	• 23  bipartisan House 
 Resolution 121, which also called on the Government of Japan to 
 formally\n\n	• 24  acknowledge, apologize, and accept historical 
 responsibility for its Imperial Armed Forces'\n\n	• 25  coercion of young 
 women into sexual slavery; and\n\nSupervisors Mar; Kim, Cohen, Christensen, 
 Yee, Farrell, Campos, Avalos\nBOARD OF SUPERVISORS Page 1\n\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 
 8 
 9\n\n10\n11\n12\n13\n14\n15\n16\n17\n18\n19\n20\n21\n22\n23\n24\n25\n\nWHEREAS, 
 In 2013, the San Francisco Board passed Resolution No. 218-13 condemning 
 Japan’s denial of its system of sexual enslavement during World War II 
 and calling for justice for “comfort women”; and\n\nWHEREAS, The year 
 2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II (1941-1945) and 
 the Pacific War (1931-1945) and the defeat of Japanese imperialism and 
 militarism by the Allies; and\n\nWHEREAS, Several cities in the U.S., 
 including, Glendale and Rohnert Park, CA; Long Island, NY; Palisades Park 
 and Union City, NJ; Fairfax, VA; and Michigan City, MI have already erected 
 memorials to help remember the "comfort women" during Japanese occupation 
 in the Pacific War; and\n\nWHEREAS, Today, human trafficking of women and 
 girls is a form of modern day slavery with 20 million victims worldwide, 
 including an estimated 1.5 million victims in North America alone, forced 
 to perform labor and sexual acts; and human trafficking is a market- driven 
 criminal industry based on the principles of supply and demand, 
 and\n\nWHEREAS, San Francisco is not immune to the problem, and has been 
 considered a destination for human trafficking due to its ports, airports, 
 industry, and rising immigrant populations; and\n\nWHEREAS, Leaders of the 
 Japanese American community have worked closely with the broader Asian 
 Pacific Islander community in the past decades to strengthen relationships 
 and build trust, understanding, and community for civil rights and social 
 justice; and\n\nWHEREAS, San Francisco is a city of immigrants and their 
 descendants, many of whom have ancestral ties to Asian and Pacific Islander 
 nations and have direct or indirect experience with Japan’s past system 
 of sexual enslavement; and\n\nWHEREAS, A growing coalition of immigrant 
 communities, women’s organizations, and human rights groups have 
 organized to establish a memorial for “comfort women” and 
 the\n\nSupervisors Mar; Kim, Cohen, Christensen, Yee, Farrell, Campos, 
 Avalos\nBOARD OF SUPERVISORS Page 2\n\n	• 1  millions of victims of the 
 Japanese military in San Francisco to ensure that the plight and\n\n	• 2  
 suffering of these girls and women will never be forgotten or erased from 
 history; now,\n\n	• 3  therefore, be it\n\n	• 4  RESOLVED, That 
 appropriate City and County agencies will work with the community\n\n	• 5 
  organizations to design and establish the memorial; and, be it\n\n	• 6  
 FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of 
 San\n\n	• 7  Francisco during the 70th anniversary of the end of World 
 War II expresses its strong support\n\n	• 8  of creating a memorial in 
 memory of those girls and women who suffered immeasurable pain\n\n	• 9  
 and humiliation as sex slaves and as a sacred place for remembrance, 
 reflection,\n\n	• 10  remorsefulness, and atonement for generations to 
 come.\n\n11 12 
 13\n\n14\n15\n16\n17\n18\n19\n20\n21\n22\n23\n24\n25\n\nSupervisors Mar; 
 Kim, Cohen, Christensen, Yee, Farrell, Campos, Avalos\n\nBOARD OF 
 SUPERVISORS\n\nPage 3\n\n###\n\n\n\n###\n\n\n-- \nSincerely,\n\nVictor Wai 
 Ho Lim\n\nKorean ‘comfort woman’ survivor appeals to San Francisco for 
 a 
 memorial\nhttp://www.sfexaminer.com/korean-comfort-woman-survivor-appeals-to-san-francisco-for-a-memorial/\nYong 
 Soo Lee, left, a “comfort woman” survivor, receives a commendation from 
 Supervisor Eric Mar at the Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday.(Mike 
 Koozmin/S.F. Examiner)\nBy Joshua Sabatini on September 16, 2015 2:00 
 am\n\nYong Soo Lee, an 87-year-old “comfort woman” survivor, flew into 
 San Francisco from Korea on Tuesday afternoon to call upon the Board of 
 Supervisors to install a memorial for others, like her, who survived 
 coercement into sexual slavery by the Japanese Imperial Army during World 
 War II.\n\n“I came to this beautiful San Francisco to meet with you and I 
 want to ask you from the bottom of my heart, please, please let me get rid 
 of my sadness in my heart by erecting a memorial in this beautiful city of 
 San Francisco,” Yong Soo Lee, also affectionately called Grandma Lee, 
 told the board through a translator.\n\nAfterwards she met with Mayor Ed 
 Lee for about 20 minutes.\n\nHer visit comes as the board’s Public Safety 
 and Neighborhood Services Committee is scheduled Thursday to vote on a 
 resolution introduced by Supervisor Eric Mar that acknowledges the atrocity 
 and supports the installation of the memorial. Survivors and women’s 
 rights advocates have long fought to bring awareness to the wartime 
 atrocities and obtain redress from Japan’s government.\n\nThe memorial is 
 stirring controversy with opposition from some in San Francisco’s 
 Japantown and is putting a strain on international relations given the 
 nine-page letter Toru Hashimoto, mayor of the city of Osaka in Japan, sent 
 to the board opposing it. Criticism ranges from taking issue with some of 
 the facts presented in the resolution, suggestions it “projects hate 
 towards a specific nationality” and focuses too narrowly on the 
 “comfort woman” issue.\n\nMayor Ed Lee would not say Tuesday, before 
 his meeting with Grandma Lee, whether he would support a memorial installed 
 in San Francisco. No major U.S. city has installed such memorials but 
 smaller municipalities have, like Glendale, where a similar debate 
 ensued.\n\nThe mayor said he was “open” to a memorial but his focus was 
 on the current debate around the resolution. The mayor said he has asked 
 Mar to “reach out to many groups so that it is not misinterpreted” and 
 that “the dialogue is appropriate.”\n\nMar commended Yong Soo Lee on 
 Tuesday, calling her an “amazing leader.” He said the effort was “for 
 justice and for empathy for hundreds and thousands of girls and women that 
 were kidnapped and coerced into sexual slavery.”\n\nSupporters expressed 
 concerns over possible amendments. “The resolution tells an accurate 
 historical account of what happened to the comfort women and why the 
 resolution is necessary,” said Julie Tang, a retired San Francisco 
 Superior Court judge, who is part of the coalition supporting it. She said 
 the “most emblematic of sexual exploitation of women and girls of the 
 last century should be remembered.”\n\nMayor Lee said he does “support 
 the recognition that ‘comfort women’ is a bad piece of our world 
 history and that we should do everything that we can to prevent it,” and 
 he linked it to the modern day human trafficking issue, which he said San 
 Francisco must continue to address.\n\nThe mayor has established an 
 anti-human trafficking task force. A recent task force report found nearly 
 300 mostly young females were victims of sex trafficking in San Francisco 
 during the last six months of 2014.\n\nMar already has seven other 
 supporters for the memorial on the board. It would take six votes to pass 
 at the board. Yong Soo Lee was 15 years old when the Japanese army took her 
 from her home and transported her to a “comfort station” for kamikaze 
 pilots. In an April 22 interview with the Washington Post, Yong Soo Lee 
 recounted being tortured and having a miscarriage. When the war ended two 
 years later she was sent home at age 17. It wasn’t until the early 1990s 
 that she began to speak about the issue.\n\n“I came here as the witness 
 of the history,” an emotional Yong Soo Lee said. “But now I am more 
 than that. I came here as an activist who is trying to resolve the history 
 for the sake of all women’s rights of the world.”\n\n\n70 years later, 
 a Korean ‘comfort woman’ demands apology from 
 Japan\nhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/local/70-years-later-a-korean-comfort-woman-demands-apology-from-japan/2015/04/22/d1cf8794-e7ab-11e4-9767-6276fc9b0ada_story.html\n\n\nYong 
 Soo Lee, 86, is visiting Washington from South Korea to speak out about her 
 experience as one of the “comfort women” for the Japanese military 
 during World War II. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)\nBy Pamela 
 Constable April 22 \nSeated on a sofa in an embroidered silk costume, Yong 
 Soo Lee is a study in grim dignity. She is 86 now, and the story of her 
 long-ago wartime ordeal emerges slowly and hesitantly at first. She speaks 
 in an embarrassed murmur, constantly rubbing a rosary.\n\nBut as she 
 continues, Lee’s gestures grow animated and angry, bearing mute witness 
 to the violence and humiliation she endured for two years as a teenage 
 captive at a Japanese military base. Her face grimaces and crumples. Her 
 hands chop the air, grab her neck, clutch her stomach.\n\n“At first the 
 other girls tried to protect me because I was so young,” she says through 
 an interpreter, beginning to weep. “I saw the soldiers on them, but the 
 girls put a blanket over me and told me to pretend I was dead so nothing 
 would happen to me. I didn’t know what they meant. I was only 14. I 
 didn’t know anything then.”\n\nLee is one of 53 surviving “comfort 
 women,” the euphemistic term used to describe tens of thousands of girls 
 and women from Korea, China and other Asian countries who were forced into 
 farm labor and sexual servitude for Japanese combat or occupation troops 
 before and during World War II.\n\nShe traveled to Washington this week 
 from South Korea to tell her story on the eve of a high-profile visit by 
 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whom some Korean American groups accuse 
 of backtracking on promises to apologize for the wartime abuses and of 
 trying to whitewash the past to placate conservative nationalist groups at 
 home.\n\nSouth Korean protesters place a defaced portrait of Japanese Prime 
 Minister Shinzo Abe next to a statue of a South Korean teenage girl during 
 an rally at the Japanese Embassy in Seoul on April 1. (Jung 
 Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty Images)\n[Abe urged to uphold Japan’s apology for 
 wartime aggression]\n\nLee’s trip was arranged by the Washington 
 Coalition for Comfort Women Issues, a group of activists who plan to stage 
 protests when Abe arrives and have demanded that he make formal amends when 
 he addresses Congress this coming Wednesday. Some scholars and politicians 
 close to the Japanese premier have suggested that many comfort women were 
 prostitutes rather than victims of an official military policy.\n\nThe 
 issue has particular resonance in Washington because of the region’s 
 large and successful Korean American community. Fairfax County is home to 
 at least 42,000 Korean Americans, who have built churches and businesses 
 and wield growing political influence there. Last May, a memorial to 
 Korea’s comfort women was built next to the Fairfax County Government 
 Center.\n\n\nThe creation of the memorial, following that of two others in 
 California and New Jersey, provoked objections from some Japanese American 
 residents and officials. But coalition leaders said their cause has 
 attracted support from human rights groups in Japan, as well as from a 
 Japanese American member of Congress, Rep. Michael M. Honda (D-Calif.), who 
 has promoted a bill calling for an “unequivocal” apology.\n\n“We 
 don’t want to offend Japan or be aggressive. We just want this issue to 
 be resolved peacefully and done with,” said Jungsil Lee, an art historian 
 in Rockville who is the coalition’s president. “We do want Abe to 
 acknowledge what happened and issue an official apology. Then we will be 
 glad to dissolve our organization and move on.”\n\nMasato Otaka, a 
 spokesman for the Japanese Embassy, said his country’s government had 
 bent over backward to make amends to the comfort women over the years, 
 making statements of apology and remorse, paying “atonement money” to 
 some victims through a special fund and sending individual letters to 
 victims from a former prime minister.\n\n“Japan has apologized over and 
 over, on various occasions,” Otaka said Wednesday. “We have done our 
 best, and I can’t think of anything better than sending personal letters 
 to the victims, but South Koreans are still telling us we didn’t go far 
 enough.”\n\nYong Soo Lee, 86, is visiting from South Korea to speak out 
 about her experience. As she tells her emotional story, her travel 
 companion, Kwark Hae Kyoung, touches her heart and pats her back. (Sarah L. 
 Voisin/The Washington Post)\nFor 47 years after the war ended and Yong Soo 
 Lee was taken home, she told no one what had happened to her. She said she 
 felt ashamed, afraid and isolated. She had no idea that her ordeal had been 
 shared by thousands of other young women at dozens of military “comfort 
 stations” throughout the Pacific. Unable to confide in her family, she 
 remained single and childless for life.\n\nBut in 1991, when another 
 comfort woman broke a half-century of silence, Lee realized that she had 
 not been alone. She registered with the government and traveled to the base 
 where she had been held, accompanied by Japanese historians. She was able 
 to learn the fate of crucial individuals, including a Japanese military 
 officer who took pity on her and was later killed in combat. And finally, 
 she began to talk.\n\n\nAs Lee recounted Tuesday during an interview at the 
 home of friends in Fairfax, her nightmare began one night in October 1943. 
 Lee said she was asleep in her family’s farmhouse when she heard a 
 neighbor calling and went outside. Soon she found herself with four other 
 girls being marched off by Japanese soldiers, then forced on a series of 
 journeys by train, truck and ship.\n\nHer final destination was a coastal 
 base for kamikaze pilots, where she learned by heart a pep song the pilots 
 sang before heading off on suicide missions. Although reluctant to state 
 explicitly that she was forced to have sex with Japanese soldiers, she 
 recounted numerous other details of her time in captivity that made the 
 circumstances painfully clear.\n\nSoon after reaching the base, she said, 
 she was told to go into a curtained cubicle and wait for a soldier, but at 
 first refused. As punishment, she said, she was brutally beaten and 
 tortured with electric shocks to her wrists. After that, she said, she 
 obeyed.\n\n“It never entered my mind to run away,” Lee said in Korean, 
 as members of her host family interpreted. “I had no idea where I was or 
 what was outside. I didn’t have a chance to talk with the other girls. My 
 food was brought to me. I thought I was alone.”\n\nOutside, the war in 
 the Pacific was raging. Lee recalled hearing loud sounds of combat, sounds 
 she said she still hears at night. At one point, the building where she 
 lived was hit by U.S. bombs. Injured in the collapse, she bled heavily and 
 thought she might die. Much later, she learned she had miscarried.\n\nWhen 
 Lee was finally rescued and sent home after the war, she was 17. But in 
 many ways, her life did not begin again until the plight of the comfort 
 women became known. In her late 60s, she threw herself into the campaign to 
 expose the abuses and demand Japanese atonement. She testified before 
 commissions and legislatures. She was taken to the Vatican to meet the 
 pope. In the process, she said she found purpose in the life she thought 
 had been thrown away.\n\n\n“I lost myself for a long time,” Lee said. 
 “I thought I was worthless. I didn’t talk about it, and nobody asked 
 me. Until the women came out, I did not exist.”\n\nNearly two hours into 
 her story, Lee’s diffident demeanor changed. She stopped rubbing her 
 rosary beads. When she spoke again, it was with deep rage against her 
 abusers, against her lost youth, even against the term that is commonly 
 used to describe her.\n\n“I never wanted to give comfort to those men,” 
 she said with a glare of disgust. “That name was made up by Japan. I was 
 taken from my home as a child. My right to be happy, to marry, to have a 
 family, it was all taken from me.” She wiped her eyes once more, then 
 straightened up on the sofa.\n\n“I am a proper lady and a daughter of 
 Korea,” Lee declared. “I don’t want to hate or hold a grudge, but I 
 can never forgive what happened to me. I must stand up for myself and the 
 others. Mr. Abe should act like a man and face the truth of the crimes that 
 were done to us. I was robbed of my youth, and I want him to apologize 
 before I die.”\n\n\n\nPamela Constable covers immigration issues and 
 immigrant communities. A former foreign correspondent for the Post based in 
 Kabul and New Delhi, she also reports periodically from Afghanistan and 
 other trouble spots overseas.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/16/18777715.php
SUMMARY:Public Events To Welcome Grandma Yong Soo Lee, WW 2 "Comfort Women" Survivor
LOCATION:San Francisco City Hall\nPolk and McCallister
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/16/18777715.php
DTSTART:20150917T200000Z
DTEND:20150917T210000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
