Encore Episode: Cheryl Diaz Meyer, Pulitzer Prize-winning Photojournalist
March 8 is International Women’s Day, a day that helps nations celebrate the elimination of discrimination against women.
Listen to Cheryl Diaz Meyer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist as she shares intimate details and the inspiration for her recent project with NPR that shines light on the last living “Comfort Women” of the Philippines.
The “Comfort Women” story was supported by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and the Yunghi Kim Grant.
To learn more about Cheryl, her work and future exhibits, visit her website.
View Cheryl’s photos and read the NPR article on the last living “Comfort Women” of the Philippines.
All over the Philippines, in grandiose mansions, schools, hospitals — churches even — women and girls were systematically raped and tortured in military brothels, some as young as 8 years old, as part of Japan’s effort to keep the Japanese Imperial Army soldiers from rebelling during World War II. Assaulted by up to 30 men daily, three quarters of the women did not survive their abuse. Of the estimated 1,000 comfort women in the Philippines, some 40 are still living. Most are physically frail, and some have succumbed to dementia. These portraits and quiet moments capture a story of survivors.