Book description
The extraordinary memoir of a war rape survivor.'How can you tell your
daughters, you know? I mean, the shame, the shame was still so great. I
knew I had to tell them but I couldn't tell them face to face . . . so I
decided to write it down.' Jan Ruff O'Herne's idyllic childhood in Dutch
colonial Indonesia ended when the Japanese invaded Java in 1942. She was
interned in Ambarawa Prison Camp along with her mother and two younger
sisters. In February 1944, when Jan was just twenty-one years old, she
was taken from the camp and forced into sexual slavery in a military
brothel. Jan was repeatedly beaten and raped for a period of three
months, after which she was returned to prison camp with threats that
her family would be killed if she revealed the truth about the
atrocities inflicted upon her. For fifty years, Jan told no-one what had
happened to her, but in 1992, after seeing Korean war rape victims
making appeals for justice on television, she decided to speak out and
support them. Before she could testify publicly, though, she had to find
a way to tell her family and friends about all she had suffered. Jan's
survival is a tribute to her inner strength and deep faith. For the past
fifteen years, she has worked tirelessly to protect the rights of women
in war and armed conflict. For the past fifteen years, Jan Ruff-OÂ
Herne has worked tirelessly to support the plight of  comfort womenÂ
and for the protection of women in war and armed conflict. Her
autobiography, Fifty Years of Silence, has been translated into Japanese
and Indonesian, and the documentary film of the same name received many
awards. She has worked with the Human Rights Commission, International
Red Cross, and Amnesty International, speaking in Australia, New
Zealand, Japan, the US and UK, the Netherlands and many other countries.