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Grandmothers, Our Grandmothers

Remembering the "Comfort Women" of World War II

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
**Recommended by the New York Public Library among its list of '50 Best New Comics for Adults' in 2023**
They have waited 75 years for an acknowledgment that what was done to them was a war crime. They are still waiting.
Grandmothers, Our Grandmothers is a beautifully and sensitively rendered narrative of the ongoing crusade of WWII's most courageous survivors: the "Comfort Women"—sex slaves—of the Japanese Imperial Army. This offering in graphic novel format is both a moving tribute and a call to awareness that, though addressing young adults, speaks to all of us.
Because crimes against any part of humanity are crimes against all humanity, such acts, and the brave people who endure them, must never be forgotten.
Focusing on the "Comfort Women" of his native Korea as well as from other countries, author and artist Han Seong-won tells the stories of women who were coerced, sometimes through abduction, into sexual slavery wherever the Japanese army put down stakes. Through his personal encounters with these valiant women, Han portrays strong individuals who refused to allow their identities to be defined by what was forced upon them. Rather, they are defined by their continuing triumph over pain, loss and memory even though their ordeals remain with them in some form to this day. Now in their nineties, these women are artists, musicians and activists. They share their personal stories with us, and give us their testimony.
This book honors so many women, like Grandmother Kang Il-chul, abducted from her home at gunpoint when she was a girl, threatened with murder when she contracted typhoid. And Grandmother Kim Hak-soon, who began giving public testimony in 1991, testified before the UN in 1993, and remained an activist for the rest of her life. It honors women who bore witness on behalf of their mothers, who kept their ordeal a secret and carried it to their graves. It honors those who have been standing in solidarity beside these women over the years.
Alongside passionate advocates from younger generations, the Grandmothers in Korea have been protesting on a weekly basis since 1992—speaking for all victims of war and violations of human rights.
This is a warm and loving tribute to the Grandmothers and the courage which led them to speak out. This book is a call to all of us to stand up for the basic rights of others.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 24, 2023
      “War does not end on the battlefields,” writes historian Seong-won in this moving and urgent collection of comics profiles of women kidnapped into sexual slavery by the Japanese Imperial Army in WWII. Based on Seong-won’s interviews, the volume sensitively depicts the activism of these “comfort women,” as they’re officially known in Korea, and their participation in the “longest running single protest in the world,” which began in 1992 and which calls for an apology from the Japanese government. These women—who are not only Korean but also Chinese, Norwegian, and from other countries Japan invaded—were stigmatized for talking about what they endured. Some were not able to return to their homes, marry, or have children after liberation. Seong-won focuses not on the brutalities but instead the bravery of these activists “of iron will”—and moments of healing (one grandmother is shown dramatically singing into a mic, “her terrible trauma soothed by the verses of a song”). Mixing vivid, colorful snapshot portraits with stripped-down black-and-white comics, the simply rendered testimonials are forceful. Recalling Keum Seuk Gendry-Kim’s Grass, this acts both as homage and witness, and as inspiration for new generations to speak out against stigma and silence.

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  • English

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