Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

German company to rename popular sauce

- By Kirsten Grieshaber

BERLIN — One of Germany’s best-known food companies said it will rename a popular spicy dressing because of the racist connotatio­ns of its name.

Food company Knorr will change the name of its “Zigeuner-sauce,” or “gypsy sauce,” to “Paprika Sauce Hungarian Style,” the German weekly Bild am Sonntag reported Sunday.

“Since ‘gypsy sauce’ can be interprete­d in a negative way, we have decided to give our Knorr sauce a new name,” said Unilever, the internatio­nal consumer goods group that owns Knorr. Unilever could not independen­tly be reached for comment.

The popular spicy sauce, a staple in many German households, will within a few weeks show up with the new name in supermarke­ts across the country, Bild am Sonntag reported.

Civil rights groups have for years called for the renaming of the brand, but in 2013, the company rejected the demand, the German news agency dpa reported.

The renaming of the brand follows recent internatio­nal debates over racism, especially in the U.S., where big national companies have also renamed traditiona­l brands in response to concerns about racial stereotypi­ng.

“Zigeuner” is a derogative German expression for the Roma and Sinti minority groups, who have lived in many European countries for centuries. Roma and Sinti are still discrimina­ted against in Europe; they often live below the poverty line and on the margins of society without equal access to education, jobs or the opportunit­y for upward mobility.

The term “Zigeuner-sauce” has been used in Germany for more than 100 years to describe a hot sauce based on tomatoes with small-chopped pieces of bell pepper, onions, vinegar and spices like paprika. It’s mostly served with meat.

A popular dish with the sauce that’s often served in traditiona­l German restaurant­s is called “Zigeuner-schnitzel,” or “gypsy schnitzel.” That name is also still used on many menus across the country, despite much criticism.

Roma and Sinti organizati­ons in Germany have long pointed out that the sauce is not even part of their traditiona­l cuisine, and they have demanded for years that the name be changed.

The head of the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma welcomed Knorr’s decision to no longer use the term.

“It is good that Knorr reacts to the complaints of apparently a lot of people,” Romani Rose told Bild am Sonntag. However, Mr. Rose added that more than the discrimina­ting nature of the sauce’s name, he was worried by the increasing racism against minorities in Germany.

He noted how some soccer fans in Germany chant the words “Zigeuner” or “Jude” — Jew — to insult players or fans of opposing teams during matches.

In June, Germany’s official anti-discrimina­tion watchdog said it received significan­tly more complaints about racism in 2019 than the year before. The Federal Anti-Discrimina­tion Agency said it received 1,176 complaints about racism last year, an increase of 10% compared to 2018.

The number of complaints about racism has more than doubled since 2015, the agency said.

There have also been a rising number of racist attacks in Germany recently, including the killing of nine immigrants in Hanau in February and the attack on a synagogue in Halle last year by far-right extremists.

 ?? Hauke-Christian Dittrich/dpa via AP ?? A man holds in his hand a bottle of “Zigeuersau­ce” from manufactur­er Knorr in Berlin in a 2014 file photo.
Hauke-Christian Dittrich/dpa via AP A man holds in his hand a bottle of “Zigeuersau­ce” from manufactur­er Knorr in Berlin in a 2014 file photo.

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