In most major historical conflicts, prostitutes have accompanied troops in one form or another. In both WW1 and WW2 there were military brothels servicing soldiers on both sides (including the allies in both wars), doing massive business. There were also innumerable casual prostitutes and other loose women servicing soldiers unofficially. These caused enormous problems with venereal disease among soldiers. In some places the military tried to stamp out brothels - but that just resulted in more "black-market" uncontrolled prostitution. In other places the military instead took the opposite approach, running official military brothels where health checks were enforced to try and reduce disease risk. But few soldiers actually wrote home about or talked about it to their descendents, so it is a part of history that tends to get forgotten about.Going back to the American Civil War, the term "hooker" originates from the vast numbers of prostitutes who followed General Hooker's army and became known as "Hooker's girls". This is a very interesting part of history that illustrates the behaviour of humanity when facing the worst of situations.
Even in WW2 there were also women who would give soldiers casual sex without requiring payment at all. We can think this is a new thing, but it clearly is just a part of the human condition.
Some interesting quotes from "Love, Sex and War" by John Costello:
And some further quotes from "Sex and the Somme". Note that the actual article has a b&w photo of a scantily clad WW1 prostitute.
Presumably these services become readily available in modern war-zones also, for exactly the same reasons. Combine starving local women with soldiers facing death and having access to some money and/or food, and this is inevitable.
But the situations described are also very similar to reports of prostitution in third-world countries. Poor parents in the Philippines today will sell the services of their daughters, exactly as families in Naples in WW2 did.
Our society tends to moralise against prostitution, preaching how evil it is - yet cannot prevent it. If a society as moral and Christian as our societies were back in WW1 could not prevent prostitution, but ended up officially facilitating it for troops instead, then this is unpreventable. Women will always resort to this when desperate enough, and there will always be men willing to pay for it.
This is real life. It's easy to moralise from our comfy chairs, but this is reality.
The only way to prevent prostitution may be to maintain an economic environment where there are no desperate women. But that can only be achieved in limited places and for limited times, times will always change.
The scriptural approach to prostitution is very interesting. It is clearly strongly spoken against in various places. Yet there is no punishment specified for prostitutes, or for men using their services. Scripture is merciful, and does not punish people for resorting to prostitution out of desperation. We are told to support women - yet if a woman fails to receive support, and has to sell her body to receive it, there is no condemnation.
I'm not sure what my point is, I just find this history fascinating and figured others may also.
Even in WW2 there were also women who would give soldiers casual sex without requiring payment at all. We can think this is a new thing, but it clearly is just a part of the human condition.
Some interesting quotes from "Love, Sex and War" by John Costello:
Nell Kimball (WW1 madam) said:Every man and boy wanted to have one last fling before the real war got him. One shot at it in a real house before he went off and maybe was killed. I’ve noticed it before, the way the idea of war and dying makes a man raunchy, and wanting to have it as much as he could. It wasn’t really pleasure at times, but a kind of nervous breakdown that could only be treated with a girl and a set-to.
The much-publicized official crackdown on organized prostitution encouraged servicemen to take advantage of the teenage ‘Victory girls’ who swarmed round military installations chasing men in uniform. By 1943, the army and navy were so concerned about complaints that girls and women were roaming the streets of Miami that a special directive was issued to military police to stop men soliciting these ‘women of easy virtue.’ But they were soon reporting failure to curb ‘soliciting of women in the streets’ because ‘the females in question often take the initiative in making the acquaintance of a soldier or sailor.’
This isn't talking about some third-world country. This is talking about Europe and the USA. Women were so desperate they were willing to prostitute themselves simply for army rations.The Italian campaign more than any other in World War II confronted the British and American military commanders with their impotence when it came to coping with endemic prostitution. A foretaste of the problem was given by British medical officers in Sicily, who were treating forty thousand VD cases a month, twenty times more than the number treated in England. As one report advised, ‘prostitution is almost universal among all but the highest class of Sicilian women.’ Government-regulated brothels also existed in all of the large towns. Control had broken down, although General Patton wasted no time trying to restore it by putting US Army medical teams into Palermo’s six large houses of prostitution. This did not endear him to General Montgomery, his arch rival, whose pride as well as his puritanism was offended when it was announced that the brothels were open for business again – under US Army management.
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Naples became the main staging port for the gruelling Italian campaign as well as the principal rest and recreation centre for thousands of Allied troops. Wine and girls were as plentiful as food was scarce for its inhabitants, who were packed into what one British officer called ‘human rookeries.’ K-rations became the passport to the passion GIs discovered Latin women could bring to the most transient of casual sexual encounters.
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In Naples, as one official American report put it, ‘Women of all classes turned to prostitution as a means of support for themselves and their families.’ A British officer recorded his surprise that Prince A. and his twenty-four-year-old sister came down from their palace to his office. ‘The purpose of the visit was to inquire if we could arrange for his sister to enter an army brothel.
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There was an estimated female population in Naples of over a hundred and fifty thousand, many of whom became freelance whores, compounding the problems caused by the estimated fifty thousand regular prostitutes in the ‘undetermined number of brothels which had previously been regulated by the civilian government and used by the German and Italian Armies.’
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‘Women of all classes turned to prostitution as a means of support for themselves and their families. Small boys, little girls, and old men solicited on every street for their sisters, mother and daughters and escorted prospective customers to their homes.’
And some further quotes from "Sex and the Somme". Note that the actual article has a b&w photo of a scantily clad WW1 prostitute.
Soldiers did not know when their time might be up. One in ten British soldiers who saw service in France and Flanders was killed there. During its bloodiest phase, a junior officer had on average just six weeks to live. These men had an entire life’s worth of experiences to squeeze into their next few mortal days.
Such behaviour was condoned, understood and accepted. But astonishingly, even more acceptable was the idea that older, married men should be entertained by prostitutes whilst away at war.
An 18-year-old Private, Bert Chaney, was intrigued by the orderly queue he saw during his few days in Béthune. He was advised by one man in the line that ‘these places were not for young lads like me, but for married men who were missing their wives’.
Private Percy Clare recalled similar advice. Clare’s memoir details the affairs that took place in Amiens and Arras between numerous prostitutes and English soldiers.
He also refers to one sermon given by his Brigade Chaplain in which he ‘excused unfaithfulness to our wives while away from home in the present circumstances’.
It was widely believed during this era that regular sex was necessary for men’s physical health.
For married men, the need was considered to be even more imperative. They had become so accustomed to regular sexual fulfilment that the routine needed to be continued even while away from the marital bed.
Venereal disease rates amongst serving soldiers were of great concern to the army authorities. 150,000 men in the British army were admitted to hospital with a venereal infection whilst stationed in France.
And this from "Inside the brothels that serviced the Western Front"Private Percy Clare said:‘Feel not disgust dear reader; nor think too hardly of them — I, who know all their circumstances, what they have borne, what they have yet to bear, cannot find it in me to condemn them, and you have no right to!’
Then of course there were the Korean "comfort girls" the Japanese army forced to work as sex-slaves for their troops. The method was morally worse, but the fundamental service being provided was the same, showing that the perceived need was universal among men of all countries.Captain Harry Siepmann, writing in the 1950s, offered another reason why he and his fellow officers had chosen to visit the brothels of Paris rather than spend a few days of precious leave in Blighty: by the end of the war, he said, the "out-of-touch atmosphere" of jingoism and unthinking patriotism in Britain "jarred badly with the grim realities of France".
Presumably these services become readily available in modern war-zones also, for exactly the same reasons. Combine starving local women with soldiers facing death and having access to some money and/or food, and this is inevitable.
But the situations described are also very similar to reports of prostitution in third-world countries. Poor parents in the Philippines today will sell the services of their daughters, exactly as families in Naples in WW2 did.
Our society tends to moralise against prostitution, preaching how evil it is - yet cannot prevent it. If a society as moral and Christian as our societies were back in WW1 could not prevent prostitution, but ended up officially facilitating it for troops instead, then this is unpreventable. Women will always resort to this when desperate enough, and there will always be men willing to pay for it.
This is real life. It's easy to moralise from our comfy chairs, but this is reality.
The only way to prevent prostitution may be to maintain an economic environment where there are no desperate women. But that can only be achieved in limited places and for limited times, times will always change.
The scriptural approach to prostitution is very interesting. It is clearly strongly spoken against in various places. Yet there is no punishment specified for prostitutes, or for men using their services. Scripture is merciful, and does not punish people for resorting to prostitution out of desperation. We are told to support women - yet if a woman fails to receive support, and has to sell her body to receive it, there is no condemnation.
I'm not sure what my point is, I just find this history fascinating and figured others may also.
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