Race faker Rachel Dolezal's shocking new life: White mom who enraged world by identifying as black reveals major reinvention, new African name... and sordid way she saved herself from ruin
•By JAMES REINL, US SENIOR REPORTER Published: 01:11, 10 May 2026 | Updated: 01:15, 10 May 2026 Ten years ago, Rachel Dolezal was the most mocked woman in America, a pale, blonde-haired white girl from...
•When the truth was exposed, she lost her career and reputation overnight.
•The 48–year–old, who has legally changed her name to the Nigerian–inspired Nkechi Diallo, spoke to the Daily Mail from her spacious $300,000 home in Tucson, Arizona, where she raises her youngest of t...
هذا الخبر من Daily Mail. خبر يقدم أدوات ذكاء اصطناعي للتلخيص والترجمة والاستماع.
By JAMES REINL, US SENIOR REPORTER Published: 01:11, 10 May 2026 | Updated: 01:15, 10 May 2026 Ten years ago, Rachel Dolezal was the most mocked woman in America, a pale, blonde-haired white girl from Montana who had reinvented herself as a black civil rights warrior – and got caught. When the truth was exposed, she lost her career and reputation overnight. The 48–year–old, who has legally changed her name to the Nigerian–inspired Nkechi Diallo, spoke to the Daily Mail from her spacious $300,000 home in Tucson, Arizona, where she raises her youngest of three sons. Unlike the handful of other white–to–black 'race fakers' who have been exposed and shamed over the years, Dolezal has never once backed down or admitted she was wrong. She still identifies as black. She still darkens her skin and wears her hair in thick locs. She still insists that race is a social construct and that she is living authentically. 'I was never faking anything about who I am at a core level,' she said. 'At the end of my life, people will notice – if they haven't already – I never really switched up.' Her exile from the civil rights movement has forced Dolezal to pursue eyebrow-raising careers. She makes and sells art but her primary source of income comes from the adult website OnlyFans. She also said she is training to be a sex coach. 'I was never faking anything about who I am at a core level,' said Rachel Dolezal, 48 Dolezal's biggest money–spinner is her OnlyFans platform, which she seeks to leverage in her new career as a certified sex coach When Dolezal's white Christian parents blew her cover in June 2015, revealing to the media that their daughter was biologically white, the backlash was extraordinary. She was president of the Spokane, Washington, chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and a part-time instructor in Africana Education at Eastern Washington University – jobs she lost almost immediately. The fury was so universal and so overwhelming that Dolezal noted with bitter humor that it managed to unite Americans who agreed on almost nothing else. Everyone from progressive feminists to the Ku Klux Klan, she said, was in rare agreement that she deserved everything she got. 'I resigned from the NAACP to protect the work. I wasn't fired, I wasn't kicked out. Nobody told me to quit,' she said. Still, critics were ferocious and unrelenting. They accused her of stealing jobs from black people, of appropriating a culture and an identity that were never hers to claim, and of being unable to truly understand what it means to grow up black in America. They pointed out, with particular relish, that at any moment she could simply reidentify as white and escape racial oppression entirely. 'I was hurt, because people were saying very, very nasty things about me from all corners of the world,' she said. 'But also people were saying very great, positive things, and it was so overwhelming to have all that input, love and hate, coming out of nowhere.' Critics also pointed to a lawsuit she had filed against Howard University back in 2002, in which she claimed she had been discriminated against for being white. The case was thrown out, but critics saw it as proof she was playing both sides of the racial divide for personal advantage. Dolezal maintained that her suit was aimed at correcting an 'injustice' over her treatment. In 2015, a local news reporter in Washington 'outed' Dolezal after revealing her Montana parents, Ruthanne and Lawrence Dolezal, were both white. High school pictures emerged of Dolezal – before she had made attempts to cast herself as a black woman – with blond hair (left) Dolezal volunteers growing vegetables at the University of Arizona's demonstration gardens Dolezal's own explanation for her identity has remained remarkably consistent since she was outed. She grew up in Troy, Montana, raised by strict, devout Christian parents who adopted four black children as her siblings. She recalls identifying as black from childhood, when she drew self-portraits using brown, rather than peach, crayons. She went on to study at Howard University, the historically black institution sometimes called the Black Harvard. She became a civil rights activist in the 2000s and started changing her hair and darkening her skin with tanning and sprays from about 2010 onward. After a cancer scare this year, she started using ingestible carotene drops for color. She has raised three black sons. Her biological sons, Franklin, 24, and Langston, 10, have different fathers and she became the legal guardian of one of her former adopted brothers. She said her responsibilities kept her grounded amid the tumult. 'I happened to be pregnant when all that happened,' she said. 'That really saved my physical self-care – there was no way, no world in which I could self-destruct.' She remains estranged from the parents who outed her. 'I still have some scars and bruises, in a sense, to my heart,' she said. Single and largely shut out of dating apps – platforms like Tinder and Hinge automatically delete accounts bearing her name, having been repeatedly spoofed – she describes her social life as a work in progress. 'I'm making efforts to have a social life, but it is tough,' she recently said. On her race, she said she always felt a deeper emotional, spiritual and psychological connection with black culture and values than with white ones. Every time Dolezal is in the headlines, she gets a flood of new subscribers to her OnlyFans page 'Race isn't real – this is a social construct that we keep acting like it's real, which fuels racism,' she said. 'You can either continue to follow this false system, or you can step outside of that and be self-determined.' She challenged what she saw as a progressive double standard: if gender identity can differ from biology, why not racial identity? 'Why is gender fluidity accepted but not racial fluidity?' Dolezal asked. Few people have been persuaded. Her 2017 memoir, In Full Color, was savaged by critics. The New Yorker dismissed it as abysmal and accused Dolezal of fetishizing black identity and posturing as a false prophet for racial reconciliation. The following year, her biological son Franklin, then a teenager, appeared in a Netflix documentary looking exhausted and resentful, urging his mother to drop her blackness claim and put the controversy behind her. It refused to fade. And neither, it turned out, did the financial misery that came with infamy. Book royalties, speaking engagements and various other attempts to monetize her notoriety netted her only around $80,000 across the two years following the scandal, court records showed – a meager return for one of the most talked-about women in America. In 2018, she was prosecuted for fraudulently manipulating her income declarations to qualify for food stamps. The charges were dropped under a plea deal that saw her repay the money and complete community service. Broke, unemployable in her field and raising children largely alone, Dolezal turned to an unlikely lifeline. She began posting on OnlyFans, the subscription platform better known for adult content. She started modestly enough, posting discussions about her artwork and makeup techniques. 'I never really aspired to be doing explicit self-play and nude modeling for income,' she said. 'It was survival at first and then became an art form for me.' She switched to lingerie shots, schoolgirl imagery and nude content for subscribers paying $9.99 a month, and describes it as the best-performing of all her business ventures by some distance. The devoted mom says she's mostly focussed on raising her youngest son, a 10–year–old with autism 'Race isn't real – this is a social construct that we keep acting like it's real,' said Dolezal She says it generates roughly a third of her total income and every time her name resurfaces in the news, a fresh wave of subscribers arrives. 'People would suggest, because you have name recognition, just do this – you'll become a millionaire,' she said. 'But none of that panned out. Except maybe the OnlyFans – I'm not a millionaire but it's paid more bills than anything else.' Rachel Dolezal – former college professor and NAACP activist known for identifying as a black woman despite having been born to white parents. She was 'outed' in 2015. Jessica Krug – a white professor of African American studies at George Washington University confessed in a Medium post earlier in September 2020 that she had been faking being black for years, and was in fact a Jewish woman from Kansas. Satchuel Cole – born Jennifer Lynn Benton, the Indiana–based activist and member of Black Lives Matter admitted in a Facebook post in September 2020 to having 'taken up space as a Black person while knowing I am white'. CV Vitolo–Haddad – she resigned from her teaching job at the University of Wisconsin–Madison after admitting in September 2020 that she pretended on multiple occasions to be black or Latino. She is actually Southern Italian and Sicilian. Hilaria Baldwin – the wife of actor Alec Baldwin was born in Boston to American parents, but changed her name from Hilary in 2009. She has claimed to be Spanish, because her parents live there and she spent time there as a child. She was 'outed' in December 2020. Natasha Lycia Ora Bannan – in January 2021 the prominent human rights lawyer admitted that she was not a Latina, but was born to white parents in Georgia. Now, she intends to build on it. She is close to completing a 300-hour certified sex coach qualification and plans to combine that credential with her OnlyFans platform to help single mothers and busy parents improve their sex lives – a niche she clearly believes is underserved. The setbacks, though, have kept coming. In 2024, she was fired from an after-school instructor job at a Tucson elementary school after her OnlyFans activities came to light. Last year, a Los Angeles art gallery canceled her exhibition at the very last minute – which she puts down to managers getting cold feet. There have been brighter moments. In 2023, she stood alongside Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs for the signing of an executive order targeting discrimination against black Americans who wear their hair in braids, locs, twists and headwraps. It was a rare return to the racial justice spotlight she once occupied. For 2026, Dolezal is using the phrase 'paradigm shift.' She said the scandal is finally in the rearview mirror and she is giving more interviews to media outlets that have previously shown her little mercy. She is tired of being permanently vilified for a decade-old controversy, she said. 'Can we agree to disagree and still respect each other,' she asked, 'and allow each other to provide for our families, and not have this need to keep me – or anybody else – punished forever?' Whether America is ready to let Rachel Dolezal off the hook remains, to put it gently, an open question. Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article.المصدر: Daily Mail | Source: Daily Mail
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