

Taiwanese dine in 'death camp'



Jail: Decked out in Nazi memorabilia





A new Taiwanese theme restaurant is pushing the boundaries of taste as it invites diners to chow down under the gaze of Nazi concentration camp victims. A new Taiwanese theme restaurant is pushing the boundaries of taste as it invites diners to chow down under the gaze of Nazi concentration camp victims. The Taipei restaurant, called Jail, which opened last month, was designed to give customers the experience of eating in a prison.



Taiwanese just aren't that aware of this history

Manager Stone Cheng Shackles, mugshots and bars surround the tables, and a mural depicts death camp victims bunched together behind barbed wire. In smaller photographs, the internees stare dully out from bunk beds, ribs protruding, eyes dead. The toilets - dubbed gas chambers - are decorated with open pipes and valves. 'Not aware' of history The restaurant's manager, Stone Cheng, told Associated Press that the owners and designers had spent months planning the interior.

Strong appetite: Customers tuck in

The theme was not intended to offend customers, or show support for the Holocaust, he said. "Taiwanese just aren't that aware of this history and aren't as sensitive about it as foreigners are." Most Taiwanese can describe in detail the atrocities committed by Japanese troops who controlled Taiwan and parts of China during World War II. But many are unclear about what happened on the other side of the world. Mr Cheng said although no one had complained, the owners might decide to remove the murals. "We just wanted to have pictures of prisons from all over the world," Mr Cheng said. Taiwanese TV star Jacky Wu is a co-owner of the eatery. Popular symbol But Hilmar Kaht, director general of the German Trade Office Taipei, said the theme was deplorable.

Young Taiwanese joke around in their 'cell'

"If such things happened in Germany, it would have been forbidden," he added. However, he believed the owners made an innocent mistake, selecting the photographs because they seemed unusual. Other Taiwanese businesses have used Nazi symbols to market everything from sports shoes to motorcycle helmets and cars. Last year, posters depicting a cartoon Adolf Hitler went up around Taipei, advertising German-made electric heaters.

Shackles and death camp photos adorn Jail

The company involved, KE and Kingstone, said it chose Hitler to emphasise that the heaters were made in Germany. After complaints from German and Jewish residents, the posters came down immediately. Don Shapiro, a long-time Taipei resident and leader in the city's small Jewish community, says Taiwan has long aspired to play an active role in the international community. But he said to do this, it must become more attuned to the sensitivities of other nationalities. "Frivolous references to the evils of Nazism for commercial reasons only serve to trivialise one of the greatest tragedies of the past century," Mr Shapiro added.