Cafe apologises for selling ‘swastika’ smoothie
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Cafe apologises for selling ‘swastika’ smoothie

A Holocaust survivor reported the cafe to an anti-Semitism watchdog, after finding the offensive symbol on a drink it was providing

Picture from JTA
Picture from JTA

A London café has come under fire for selling a smoothie with a swastika drawn on the label of the bottle.

Called the “Nutzy,” the smoothie was being sold at the Nin Com Soup café in north London. The cafe’s founder later apologiSed.

A Holocaust survivor reported the smoothie and its label to the Campaign Against Antisemitism.

“I left the shop almost in tears and shivering as it proved to me how much anti-Semitism and fascism is still utterly present,” the survivor said.

Speaking of the shop’s manager, the survivor said, “That man had no shame whatsoever to tell me that I should not be offended by what I saw when the use of the swastika and the name of that drink is clearly not a coincidence.”

According to the survivor, a man, the manager said the name of the drink was a play on “having the nuts,” or courage, and was a pun because the drink contains nuts. The survivor said he told the manager that the name of the drink and the symbol were offensive to someone who lost his whole family in the Holocaust, and the manager responded that London “is a free city.”

The café’s founder, Ben Page-Phillips, said Sunday in an apology posted online that the swastika on the bottle was “unsanctioned,” and that the bottles were removed immediately after the manager was alerted.

“This was incomprehensible, extremely insensitive, and upsetting to all of us. We unreservedly apologize,” the statement said.

 

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