For decades, Koreans have been pushing to preserve the legacy of women forced to provide sex to Japanese army soldiers during World War II. Glendale, Calif., will dedicate a statue memorializing the victims, known as “comfort women,” on Tuesday. But the statue has spurred controversy in this Southern California city, where some area residents say it is a divisive reminder of the horrors of war.
The sculpture is a bronze statue of a young girl. She looks about 14 — around the same age as many comfort women when they were forced into military brothels run by Japan’s imperial army.
Ok-seon Lee, 86, was one of them. She’s in California, visiting with Korean-American activists. These activists don’t say “comfort women” when she’s around. Instead, they call her halmoni, Korean for “grandmother.”
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