The Oklahoman

Wayfair pulls towel depicting deity

- By The Associated Press

BOSTON—Online home goods retailer Way fair has pulled a beach towel depicting the Hindu deity Lord Ganesha, according to a Hindu organizati­on that raised objections.

Rajan Zed, president of Universal Society of Hinduism, said in a statement Thursday that the Boston-based company had apologized and removed the towel from its website within an hour of the organizati­on raising concerns.

Zed called the "Hindu Elephant Beach Towel," which retailed for about $26, "highly inappropri­ate" and thanked Wayfair for understand­ing the Hindu community' s concerns.

He said t he company "should not be in the business of religious appropriat­ion, sacrilege, and ridiculing entire communitie­s" and suggested it and other companies send their senior executives for training in religious and cultural sensitivit­y.

Lord Ganesha is worshiped by Hindus as a god of wisdom and is invoked before the beginning of any major undertakin­g, according to Zed.

The Reno, Nevada-based organizati­on said Wayfair previously removed a cutting board, pillow and bathmats carrying images of Lord Ganesha after Hindus protested.

The company, which was founded in 2002, didn't respond to an email seeking comment Friday.

Zed's organizati­on is part of an interfaith coalition that's recently called on Anheuser-Busch InBev to rename its Brahma beer line—which shares its name with a Hindu god, but isn' t named for the deity, the beer giant says — and also urged nightclubs to stop using sacred Buddhist and Hindu imagery as decor.

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