A book that symbolizes the pain and pain of comfort women in the Japanese military is also published in Japan.



According to the Tokyo Shimbun, Japanese writer Minori Kitahara, 50, plans to release a'flower that can't bloom' through her publishing house in May this year.



This book, which contains stories about 200 paintings of comfort women victims, such as the late grandmother Kang Deok-gyeong, was first released in 2000 as a collection of Korean, English, and Japanese versions of the paintings.




The works in the book are rooted in the art classes of painter Lee Kyung-shin and grandmothers, which began in'The House of Sharing' more than 20 years ago.



As part of their hobby programs, when they started studying painting, the grandmothers began to express their sense of damage and anger that they naturally suppressed.



The Tokyo Shimbun reported that the work of Grandmother Kang Gyeong-deok, ``Stolen Soon Jeong,'' depicts a girl crying under a cherry tree after being ``raped'' by a Japanese soldier. He said it was done.



Mr. Kitahara said, "This book shows the (comfort women's) grandmothers as they are unknown," he said. Joining the relay of people who have spoken up in the war against sexual violence in wartime will change Japan.



Kitahara is working as a director of the Seeds of Hope Fund, launched in Japan in June 2017 to promote the correct history of comfort women with Yang Jing-ja, the second generation of Koreans in Japan.