12 June 2015

Professor accused of pretending to be black


Slate has an article by Beth Ethier about what constitutes identity:
The NAACP issued a statement about their branch president in Spokane, Washington, Rachel Dolezal: "she is enduring a legal issue with her family, and we respect her privacy in this matter. One’s racial identity is not a qualifying criteria or disqualifying standard for NAACP leadership. The NAACP Alaska-Oregon-Washington State Conference stands behind Dolezal’s advocacy record... We encourage Americans of all stripes to become members and serve as leaders in our organization.
The NAACP's statement also addressed, indirectly, the questions raised about the threats Dolezal says arrived in her chapter's post office box:
Hate language sent through mail and social media along with credible threats continue to be a serious issue for our units in the Pacific Northwest and across the nation. We take all threats seriously,  and encourage the FBI and the Department of Justice to fully investigate each occurrence.
Original post.:
Rachel Dolezal is an adjunct professor of Africana Studies at Eastern Washington University. She was elected president of the Spokane NAACP last year. She serves as the chair of an ombudsman commission to represent the interests of the area's minority groups in relations with the Spokane police.
Her parents say that Dolezal has been falsely presenting herself as black for years when she is actually of "Swedish, Czech, and Geman" background with some possible traces of Native American heritage, reports the Seattle Times.
Dolezal's race has become the focus of an investigation by Spokane's city government amid accusations that she lied when seeking a seat on the commission by claiming to be of Caucasian, Native American, and black American background. 
From ABC affiliate KXLY in Spokane:
Public records, including Dolezal's own birth certificate, list her biological parents as Ruthanne and Lawrence Dolezal of Montana. The Dolezals told KXLY that Rachel is their biological daughter and that they are both white.
Dolezal posted a photo (since removed) to Facebook in December of 2014 of herself with a black man, identified in the caption as her father. When confronted by a KXLY reporter with the photo and asked about the ethnic background of the parents listed on her birth certificate, Dolezal abruptly ended the interview and walked away.
Dolezal made news in Spokane several weeks ago when she reported receiving threatening mail, including images of nooses, in the NAACP chapter's post office box. The materials, however, were in an envelope without postal markings, indicating it hadn't been sent through the mail but had instead been placed by hand by the box's owner or a postal employee. Dolezal denied placing the materials in the box.
Before moving to Spokane, Dolezal lived in Idaho, where she claimed to have been targeted repeatedly with break-ins and threats for her work in education and human rights. She described her time in Idaho to local website The Easterner in February of 2015:
In Idaho, Dolezal took on the role as director of the Human Rights Institute, where North Idaho white supremacy groups burglarized every home she and her son lived in. Dolezal said she believes the white supremacy groups felt threatened by female power. According to Dolezal, they hung nooses in her home, vandalized and stole from her property, directed death threats toward her, along with threatening to kidnap Franklin while he was in the second grade. She reported all of these acts to the police and each was admitted into police records as hate crimes, yet the culprits were never caught.
Dolezal moved from home to home and everywhere she moved, they followed. The hate crimes finally ended when she moved to Spokane in 2012.
According to the Coeur d'Alene Press, one of the two boys that Dolezal describes as her sons is her younger adopted brother.
Dolezal was not very forthcoming about her background when she was approached this week by the Seattle Times:
Dolezal, 37, avoided answering questions directly about her race and ethnicity, saying, "I feel like I owe the NAACP executive committee a conversation" before engaging in a broader discussion with the community about what she described as a "multi-layered" issue.
"That question is not as easy as it seems," she said after being contacted at Eastern Washington University, where she’s a part-time professor in the Africana Studies Program. "There’s a lot of complexities … and I don’t know that everyone would understand that."
Later, in an apparent reference to studies tracing the scientific origins of human life to Africa, Dolezal added: "We're all from the African continent."
Dolezal's mother told the Seattle Times that Rachel began to "disguise herself" about nine years ago, when she would have been in her late twenties, after the family adopted several black children. "It's very sad that Rachel has not just been herself," Ruthanne Dolezal told the paper. "Her effectiveness in the causes of the African-American community would have been so much more viable, and she would have been more effective, if she had just been honest with everybody."
Rico says that wanting to change your race is no different than someone wanting to change their gender... (And a DNA test would clear all this up.)

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