Swastika shirts pulled after backlash
Little-known company tried to ‘reclaim’ Nazi symbol with derided rainbow version
A design studio that tried to “reclaim” the swastika by selling shirts emblazoned with rainbow versions of the Nazi symbol has pulled its products after weeks of backlash, including from a national anti-Semitism group.
KA Design first pushed out its idea for “the new Swastika” in a July 12 Facebook video that reviewed the swastika’s long history.
For thousands of years, the video noted, the swastika had been used in numerous cultures to symbolize peace, love, luck, infinity and life.
“But one day Nazism,” text in the video noted, in one of the clip’s many capitalization-challenged semi-non sequiturs. “they stigmatized the Swastika forever. they won / they limited our freedom / or maybe not? the Swastika is coming back . . . introducing the new Swastika.”
The video then showed an array of swastikas set against a rainbow background and the words “PEACE,” “LOVE” and “ZEN.”
“Wear the freedom,” the video declared, closing with the design studio’s motto: “Questioning Boundaries.” Soon, the Facebook video was flooded with comments.
Some thought it must have been a joke, while others were outraged, blasting the campaign as “disgusting” and “ignorant.”
“There is no ‘new swastika’, and frankly your inability to understand that on an ethical and culturally sensitive way is downright disturbing,” a Facebook user wrote in one of the less-profane comments. “And absolutely anti-Semitic. Shut this campaign off.”
Others tried to give the brand the benefit of the doubt — but, even then, accused the designers of glossing over why the swastika had become problematic for the sake of profit.
“Trying to ‘reclaim’ the swastika to be edgy is an insult to all the people who lost their lives during that war,” another Facebook user wrote.
“I hope you take down that video and issue an apology, or your company is going to end up crashing and burning. We get what you were trying to accomplish, but some things need to just stay in the past and be burnt. Not everything can and should be reclaimed.”
It’s unclear who is behind KA Design or where it is based. Reached by email Monday, a representative said the company did not want to reveal any such information before a “public launch very soon.”
KA Design had reportedly been selling T-shirts on Teespring.com, an online marketplace for independent designers akin to Etsy. By Monday, none of its products were available on the third-party site.
It caught the attention of the AntiDefamation League (ADL), which decried the shirts as “an offensive use of Nazi imagery.”
“Fashion can’t reclaim this symbol from #hate,” the ADL wrote on Twitter.
KA Design released a statement Monday that seemed to recognize its campaign had failed.
“Teespring has nothing to do with our project,” the brand wrote.
“It is a beautiful company with the nicest people around. Leave all the Hate to us.”