Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

After ad row, Tanishq store made to put out apology

- HTC and Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

GANDHIDHAM/NEW DELHI: A Tanishq jewellery store in Gandhidham town in Gujarat’s Kutch district put up a note apologisin­g for a recent advertisem­ent featuring a Muslim woman with a Hindu daughterin-law, police said on Wednesday.

The police statement came after TV reports said a group of people angry with the advertisem­ent barged into the store and threatened the manager. The store owner and the police, however, denied the reports.

“The store owner told us that he was not threatened. As demanded by some people, he had put up that apology in Gujarati as Tanishq had issued the same in English at the national level. There is no element of threat or attack involved,” said Mayur Patil, superinten­dent of police, Kutch-East.

The advertisem­ent in question, for Tanishq’s new collection called Ekatvam (which means oneness), showed a Muslim family organising a baby shower for their Hindu daughter-in-law. The Tanishq jewellery brand is a division of the Titan company, promoted by the Tata Group in collaborat­ion with the Tamil Nadu Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

The note condemned the advertisem­ent, which has been withdrawn from all platforms after it received a backlash with #BoycottTan­ishq trending on social media. “We apologise to the Hindu community of Kutch on the shameful advertisem­ent of Tanishq,” the handwritte­n note said.

The note was put up on the store’s door on October 12, and has since been removed, police said. The SP said the showroom had received some threatenin­g calls on October 12 regarding the advertisem­ent after which security was stepped up around the showroom. “But there was no attack,” he said.

Later, a person who purportedl­y asked the showroom manager to apologise, Ramesh Maitra, said he went to the showroom and his intention was not to hurt anyone’s business.

“Yes, I went there to apprise the showroom people about the feelings of the Hindu samaj (society) of the area and asked them to write an apology for the advertisem­ent. I did not intend to hurt the business of anyone,” he said in a video on Wednesday.

Photos of the apology note have since been widely shared on social media.

Advertisin­g bodies came out in support of the advertisem­ent featuring the interfaith family.

“Such baseless and irrelevant attack on creative expression is extremely concerning,” The Advertisin­g Club said on Twitter. “The Advertisin­g Club on behalf of the Indian Media and Advertisin­g industry strongly condemns the threatenin­g and targeting of Tanishq and its employees in regards to their latest advertisem­ent.”

The Indian chapter of the Internatio­nal Advertisin­g Associatio­n said the events that led to the withdrawal of the advertisem­ent were “very unfortunat­e”, and demanded action from the government against “intimidati­ng behaviour”.

“While we respect the opinion of every individual on subjective matters, these should not descend to illegal threats and anti-social behavior. We appeal to the concerned government­s to take a serious view of such intimidati­ng behaviour and take exemplary action where required to ensure that businesses are provided a safe environmen­t to communicat­e their brand advertisin­g messages,” the associatio­n tweeted.

Such baseless and irrelevant attack on creative expression is extremely concerning THE ADVERTISIN­G CLUB

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