GWANGJU, South Korea — Since 2000, Tsukasa Yajima has taken stark, poignant portraits of former intercourse slaves for Japan’s World Warfare II military to assist the world find out about their painful historical past.

Now, the 51-year-old photographer from Japan finds himself on the middle of a present scandal in regards to the remedy of the ladies, greater than three-quarters of a century after the tip of the struggle, throughout which they have been compelled to have intercourse with Japanese troopers.

Within the years after its founding in 1992, the Home of Sharing, in Gwangju, South Korea, assumed the aura of a sacred place, the place ​​politicians and college students ​got here to satisfy dozens of former intercourse slaves, identified euphemistically as “consolation girls,” who had discovered shelter there, together with the 4 at the moment in residence.

However previously two years, Mr. Yajima, who runs its worldwide outreach program, together with six South Korean staff on the shelter have accused managers of housing ​the ladies, all now of their 90s, in a substandard nursing facility​ whereas gathering tens of millions of {dollars} in donations to counterpoint South Korea’s greatest ​and strongest ​Buddhist order, Jogye.

Though the ​donations have been collected for the ladies’s welfare, ​little has been used for ​them, ​ Mr. Yajima and the opposite whistle-blowers stated. As an alternative, ​they stated, the managers saved the cash for Jogye to ​increase the ​shelter right into a future ​luxurious ​nursing house for individuals who can afford to pay — as soon as the ladies dwelling there now have all died.

“It’s essential to protect the Home of Sharing as a spot of historic and academic worth​, as wartime sexual violence in opposition to girls​ continues to occur ​in at present’s world, in locations like Ukraine,” Mr. Yajima stated. “Their plan to show it into a typical nursing house is a challenge of eradicating historical past.”

The whistle-blowing led to prison indictments​. Two former managers ​​are on trial on fraud, embezzlement and different prison costs​. The shelter’s board members, together with one of many nation’s most distinguished Buddhist monks, have been fired for negligence. Indignant donors have sued ​the Home of Sharing, demanding their a reimbursement. Donations plummeted to $35,300 within the first six months of this 12 months, down from $1.9 million in 2019.

Whereas they’ve received reward for his or her actions, Mr. Yajima and the opposite whistle-blowers have additionally needed to pay a value for what they uncovered.

The shelter’s new and former managers and folks near them have filed dozens of defamation​ and different lawsuits in opposition to the whistle-blowers, accusing them of spreading false rumors. ​

As a Japanese nationwide, Mr. Yajima has been a spotlight of a lot of the backlash. The sexual slavery of so-called consolation girls is probably the most emotional of the numerous historic disputes which have strained ties between South Korea and Japan, the 2 most essential allies of the USA in East Asia.

“Why ​the hell ​is a Japanese worker employed on this place for consolation girls?” ​learn a banner held on the wall of a Home of Sharing constructing the place Mr. Yajima labored. Individuals near the managers threw ethnic slurs at him, in line with the findings of a human rights middle. ​

4 of the seven whistle-blowers give up final month, complaining about harassment.

However not Mr. Yajima, who has insisted on staying on​.

His ​marketing campaign has raised ​essential questions for South Korea, stated Lim Mi-ri, a professor at Korea College​ in Seoul​. Ms. Lim stated the ladies have been taken to​ conferences and​ protest rallies the place they have been ​handled as an inviolable image of ​Korea’s struggling beneath Japanese colonial rule​ and warriors for historic justice​. However few requested how the ladies really lived behind the scenes.

“Yajima is without doubt one of the uncommon activists I do know who targeted on consolation girls as particular person people whereas the​ remainder of the​ marketing campaign tended to objectify them as victims and use them for a political agenda or fund-raising,” Ms. Lim stated. ​

Mr. Yajima stated he ​turned inquisitive about feminism and Japan’s colonial period when he studied historical past at Waseda College in Tokyo. He started visiting the Home of Sharing in 2000, initially working ​there as a translator and photographer from 2003 to 2006.

“In my images, I attempt to present the ladies’s collective picture as victims, but additionally the ladies as people with personalities,” ​Mr. Yajima stated. “Should you get to reside and eat with them as I’ve, growing a grandm​different and grandchild​-like​ relationship, you get to see issues that occasional guests can’t. Individuals see them as heroic warriors. However when they’re amongst themselves, they’ll additionally argue like kindergartners over ​issues like who was given another sweet when donated items have been divided.”

In 2006, Mr. Yajima moved to Germany​, the place he continued to work for the ladies’s trigger. He helped manage lectures and picture exhibitions and invited one of many girls to share her story. By the point he returned to the Home of Sharing in 2019, what he noticed deeply troubled him.

When a​ girl fell from a damaged mattress, the managers refused to take her to the hospital or purchase a brand new mattress, he stated. When the ​girls’s ​dwelling quarters have been renovated, their belongings have been stacked exterior, uncovered to a monsoon rain. In a supervisor’s desk drawers, the whistle-blowers discovered money donations from overseas that weren’t ​correctly ​registered within the books.

An investigation by a joint panel of presidency officers and civilian specialists confirmed many of the whistle-blowers’ ​accusations and extra.

In its 366-page report, ​considered by The New York Occasions, the panel stated th​e Home of Sharing had “mobilized” its consolation girls for fund-raising occasions whereas it denied them private outings. ​S​taffers emotionally abused the​m, threatening to “abandon them out on the road​.” The panel stated​ that the Home of Sharing collected $6.8 million in money donations between 2015 and 2019. ​However it solely used $154,000 for the operation of the ​dwelling quarters the place the ladies “lived in a below-average nursing house facility​.”

“Amassing donations with a promise to make use of them for the consolation girls, their welfare and their actions however not utilizing the cash for them is an act of defrauding the folks,” it stated.

​The Home of Sharing has made “errors” and ​“violated” the legal guidelines governing donations, stated the Venerable Seonghwa, a Buddhist monk Jogye appointed in Might to move ​its board of administrators.

However Seonghwa stated that the ladies have been getting sufficient monetary assist — $2,600​ ​a month​, in addition to a $10,810 annual medical stipend — from the federal government. They’d little use for the money donated from residents, he stated. ​

And the plan to remodel the ​shelter right into a luxurious nursing house ​has been mentioned as an choice in a rustic fighting a quickly getting older inhabitants. However the plan has by no means been formalized, he stated. Seonghwa burdened that the way forward for the shelter will probably be determined by means of consultations with the federal government.

“We’re correcting issues now we have discovered and dealing exhausting to take the most effective care of the consolation girls till the final ​of them dies,” he stated​.

​Throughout current visits, the Home of Sharing’s 3.4-acre compound seemed peaceable. ​The bronze bust statues of former intercourse slaves greeted guests on the gate. ​ Its museum​ featured a recreation of a so-called consolation station, a Japanese military-run brothel, the place the ladies have been compelled to have intercourse with ​dozens of ​Japanese troopers​ on daily basis.

“I’ll always remember the struggle crimes of Japan,” reads the epitaph for Lee Yong-nyo, one of many eight former residents of the power buried in a memorial backyard. ​

On the middle of the compound ​was a ​two-story ​constructing the place 4 of South Korea’s 11 surviving consolation girls​ have been spending their last days. The variety of caregivers has been doubled to 10, permitting for round the clock service for the ladies, ​ aged 92 to 98​ — an enchancment carried out by the managers within the wake of the whistle-blowing. ​

However the girls’s skill to demand higher remedy has atrophied, stated Heo Jeong-a, a​ former​ caregiver who joined Mr. Yajima within the whistle-blowing​.

Frail and struggling varied levels of dementia, the​ girls appeared largely oblivious to the turmoil engulfing their ​shelter. Throughout a current go to, a Occasions reporter was allowed into the ladies’s dwelling quarters and talked to some girls who appeared extra cognizant than the others.

“I’ve meals, garments and a spot to reside ​right here,” sa​id ​​Lee Okay-sun, 95, taken to China to work in army brothels when she was 15 and who lived there till she was provided shelter within the Home of Sharing in 2001. “It retains me heat in winter and funky in summer time.”

Such a solution didn’t shock Mr. Yajima.

“They’d such a tough life in China and elsewhere that they are saying they’re OK with what they get,” he stated. “However they deserved the most effective care we may present, and now we have failed.”