My Sister's Place (RR: Durebang; MR: Turebang; Hangul: 두레방) is an advocacy and counseling group founded in March 1986 in Uijeongbu, South Korea.
It focuses on improving the lives of women who have entered the sex industry in and around U.S. military base camp towns in Korea.
Durebang work with women from diverse backgrounds—Korean-born, Russian, and Filipina women—challenging the militarism and exploitation in the camp town sex industry.
[4] My Sister's Place focuses its efforts on providing daily survival skills for women working in camp town areas.
The immediate support that the shelter provides enable women to find temporary safety until they can acquire their own permanent residence or fulfill their plan of action.
The bakery worked in partnership with a group of local college student activists who volunteers to deliver and sell the bread on campus.
One of their efforts was in denouncing the murder of Yoon Kum-Yi, and bringing public attention to the incident by organizing a large demonstration of 3,000 people.
Yoon Kum-Yi who was a sex worker was brutally murdered and mutilated in October 1992 at Camp Casey in South Korea.