Annandale Statue of Peace honors Korean ‘comfort women’
Annandale has a new statue memorializing the “comfort women,” a euphemism for the Korean
women forcibly taken by the Japanese military to serve as sex slaves during World War II.
women forcibly taken by the Japanese military to serve as sex slaves during World War II.
The “Statue of Peace,” featuring a seated girl next to an empty chair, was installed at 7601 Little River Turnpike in front of the building that houses the Korea Times and Hans Travel.
The unveiling ceremony on Oct. 21 was organized by the Washington Coalition for Comfort Women Issues; the National Unification Advisory Council, D.C. Chapter; and the Executive Committee of the Statue of Peace Washington Butterfly for Hope.
A press release about the Statue of Peace unveiling says it commemorates former comfort women’s “bravery, endurance, and longing for justice” and also serves as “a physical reminder of the past wrongdoing and inaction of the Japanese government on the demands by victims.” Those demands include an official apology and legal reparation.
At the ceremony, Gil Won-ok, a 92-year-old survivor, said her “youth and dreams” were taken away at the age of 13 when she was forced into a Japanese military brothel in China. She also criticized the Japanese government for failing to issue a sincere apology.
A display at HIZ Creative Design. |
The first statue to memorialize comfort women was installed in front of the Embassy of Japan in Seoul, Korea, in 2011.
The Annandale statue is the fifth Statue of Peace and the 14th comfort women memorial in the United States. A Comfort Women Memorial Peace Garden was installed behind the Fairfax County Government Center in 2014.
The statue, designed by Kim Seo-Kyung and Kim Un-Sung, includes these symbolic elements:
- The face of the girl shows her anger about her treatment.
- The bird on her shoulder is a symbol of peace, freedom, and liberation.
- The girl’s clenched fists represent how the victims will no longer be silent about Japan’s war crimes.
- Her short hair is a symbol of how the girls had their relationships with family and friends severed against their will.
- The girl’s heels are unattached to the ground to show how the lives of the victims were unstable.
- The empty chair invites people to sit down next to the girl and think about how it
could have happened to them to their sister. - The shadow on the floor of the statue is that of an old woman, representing the
hardships the victims suffered their whole lives.
There’s a large display board describing the Statue of Peace at HIZ Creative Design next door
at 7535 Little River Turnpike.
at 7535 Little River Turnpike.
The organizers had initially hoped to place the statue in Washington, D.C., but the approval process proved to be “very difficult and complicated” and could have taken years, said Jungsil (Julie) Lee, president of the Washington Coalition for Comfort Women Issues.
But, “Koreans are impatient people,” Lee said, so “there was a lot of sentiment to get it done in 2019.” Its current location, at the gateway to Annandale from the beltway in front of the iconic Korea Times building, will draw more visitors to the community, she said. Meanwhile, the groups are still hoping to get another statue installed in D.C.
The unveiling drew people from across the United States, as well as local elected leaders. Just as pilgrims in the Middle Ages brought mass tourism to small towns along the way, Lee said, this statute could heighten the visibility of the small town of Annandale.
In addition to commemorating the comfort women, she says, the statue also can be seen as a way to think about the victims of all human trafficking.
Very sweet, I am glad Annandale can house such a tribute.
In our country, they also honoring those women that serves as sex slaves of Japanese military.Some of the Japanese National, every time they encounter women in out country they ask for forgiveness. Which is very touhing, although it happened many years ago. They are aware of the wrong doing of their militars in the past.