Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact
Shin Sakuma Bldg. 3F, 2-13-14, Nishi-Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-0003,
JAPAN
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03-3519-4366 Fax 03-3519-4367 URL http://www.sdh-fact.com
February 16, 2007
The Honorable Mike Honda
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
1713 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515‑0515
RE:
An Open letter to Representative Honda
Dear Representative Honda:
On January 31, 2007 you, along with six other Representatives, submitted
House Resolution 121, which calls on the Japanese government to apologize
for having forced young women to become sex slaves during World War II,
to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The import of Resolution 121
is identical to that of Resolution 759, which expired in committee last
year.
On September 28, 2006, we sent the attached letter to all members of the
House of Representatives. In it, we indicated that the accusations in Resolution
759 were exceedingly unjust and based on gross distortions of historical
fact. Accordingly, we find it very difficult to comprehend your reasons
for submitting this resolution.. We strongly urge you to withdraw it without
delay.
If you choose not to withdraw Resolution 121, you must shoulder the burden
of disproving historical fact as outlined in the aforementioned letter.
The persons referred to as “comfort women” were prostitutes (a legal profession
at the time) working in brothels; they were indisputably not coerced to
engage in such activities by the Japanese military.
We would like to draw particular attention to excerpts from two official
U.S. military records cited in our letter. The first is a report issued
by the United States Office of War Information, Psychological Warfare Team
Attached to U.S. Army Forces, India-Burma Theater, which states that ”comfort
girls” are nothing more than a prostitute or professional “camp follower”,
and the girls’ average total monthly earnings were 1,500 yen, and 750 yen
went to their master. (The monthly salary of a sergeant in the Japanese
Army at the time was 30 yen; thus, the prostitutes made over 25 times more!)
The second can be found in depositions
taken from three Korean civilian employees of the Japanese army, who stated the
following: In the battle zones of the Pacific War, the Korean comfort women we
met were all either volunteers, or women who had been sold by their parents. If
the women had been victims of coercion, all the Koreans both young and old
would have risen up in rage, and regardless of whatever retaliation, killed the
Japanese (from Composite Report on Three Korean Civilians, List No. 78, dated
28 March 1945, “Special Question on Koreans” in the U.S. National Archives).
We also attach a research paper that describes the comfort women, and how
misunderstandings about them originated in Japan and grew into an international
problem of monumental proportions. It also discusses how the various nations
involved in the Pacific War dealt with the sexual needs of their military
personnel in battle zones. It is our fervent hope that you will read it
and the other attachment, and, thus, arrive at an accurate understanding
of the comfort women and their circumstances.
We appeal to your wisdom and sense of
justice, as this is a matter of honor for us, as Japanese, and also affects the
human rights of all concerned. We look forward to your reply.
Very truly yours,
KASE Hideaki
Chairman