A childrenās costume in the likeness of Holocaust victim Anne Frank is still being sold years after a massive backlash and after being pulled by other retailers.
Australian editor and producer Jack Latimore tweeted a screenshot of the Australian website for UK costume retailer Smiffys on Friday in which the āWorld War II Evacuee Girl Costumeā was listed for sale for $31.95.
āAustralian stores have stocked this Halloweāen costume & I clearly must have missed something at some point because just wtf?ā he wrote on Twitter.
The costume featured a cheery young girl wearing a World War II-era dress, beret and bag.
The social media post sparked a string of replies of disapproval of the outfit, with one person writing, āThis world getting dumber and dumberā and another putting it simply, āJust noā.
Another person claimed Latimore had been mistaken by the costume, tweeting, āI donāt want to mansplain. But hoping that youāre aware this is in relation to the evacuation of kids in London? Like Narnia and Carrieās War? Not Jewish children during the holocaust.ā
Latimore then tweeted a screenshot showing the same costume is being sold elsewhere as the āWW2 Anne Frank Girls Costumeā.
Carlos Galindo-Elvira, regional director of the Anti-Defamation Leagueās Arizona office, summed up a lot of peopleās feelings in this tweet when the costume was criticised in 2017:
āAll our World War II Evacuee Costumes have been a staple of our world wide range for many years. With Smiffyās being a UK based company representing this time in history is very important,ā Smiffys Australia said in a statement to HuffPost Australia.
āIf you look at our website this costume is listed under our 1940ā²s range and has never been marketed by Smiffys as a Halloween costume and never will.ā
For those unfamiliar with her story, Anne Frank was a 15-year-old German teenager who hid from the Nazis in Amsterdam during World War II and wrote a diary about her experiences in hiding.
After being discovered by the Gestapo, Anne and her family were split up. In October 1944, she, along with her sister Margot, was taken to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Anne nearly survived the war but died of typhus in March 1945. Bergen-Belsen was liberated by British troops the next month. Anneās diary, āThe Diary of a Young Girl,ā was published posthumously.
Earlier this month, Target in the US removed a similar costume made by Smiffys, which was described as:
āIs your child studying World War II or the Holocaust? Now you can help her transport back in time to the 1940s. They say that dressing up can be an important learning technique and this WW2 Girl costume for kids will be the perfect learning tool.ā
āWe apologize to any guests who were offended by this costume. We have removed it from Target.com and are sharing this feedback with the vendor. In addition, we are taking this opportunity to review the process we have in place before a costume is available for purchase on Target.com,ā a Target spokesperson told Fox News.
With additional reporting by Jenna Amatulli.