⚠️ Historical Documentation Notice
This document is part of a historical archive and is presented for scholarly research and educational purposes.
The content reflects historical perspectives and should be understood within its historical context.
This
brand name was put together by
technicians who had no idea
what the implications were. We
are very sorry.
— Company spokesman
Thursday September 5, 2002
David Irving recalls:
IN FACT, Zyklon brand pest-control tablets were still being marketed in the UK after the war (the distributors’ telegraphic address was “Zyklon,
London”). The files are in the
Public Record Office. More recently, outraged Jewish leaders managed to get a “Zyklon” helter-skelter at a fairground renamed in Brighton,
England.
Siemens withdraws “Zyklon” trademark
FRANKFURT (Reuters) —
Germany’s Siemens says it has abandoned plans to register the trademark “Zyklon” in the United States, because of the name’s association with
Nazi gas chambers.
The company, which had hoped to use the trademark on household products including gas ovens, issued an apology, saying it had not meant to cause offence with the name.
It said it had withdrawn two applications filed with the U.S. Patent
& Trademark office last year through its Bosch Siemens Hausgeräte (BSH) unit, a consumer products joint venture.
Zyklon B, originally developed as a pesticide, was employed as a poisonous gas by the Nazis to murder millions of people in various extermination camps.
“This brand name was put together by technicians who had no idea what the implications were,” said a spokeswoman for
BSH GmbH. “We are very sorry if the trademark application caused any offence.”
[Zyklon B]According to a report by the BBC the filing has caused outrage among Jewish Groups, particularly as Siemens had used slave labour during the Nazi period.
“This is a major, major scandal,” said
Shimon Samuels head of the European arm of the Simon
Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights organisation, the BBC reported.
Related items on this website:
Dropping the other shoes: Target
stops selling 88 clothing
Umbro
drops its Zyklon shoe after Jewish
protests