At first appeared on E! On the net
Previous activist Nkechi Diallo has shed her instructing task around her “personal” facet hustle.
Diallo—who made headlines as Rachel Dolezal in 2015, when she was exposed as a white female pretending to be Black though serving as a NAACP chapter president—is no more time utilized by the Catalina Foothills School District in Tucson, Ariz., following the discovery of her OnlyFans account.
“We only realized of Ms. Nkechi Diallo’s OnlyFans social media posts yesterday afternoon,” the faculty district said in a statement to E! News on Feb. 14. “Her posts are opposite to our district’s ‘Use of Social Media by District Employees’ policy and our workers ethics coverage.”
On OnlyFans, a site regarded for its older people-only information, Diallo observed that her web page would be “the place I submit resourceful articles and give followers a extra personal seem into my lifetime.”
Her posts involved nude and explicit visuals, including an express Xmas picture selection for a “Extremely Merry period crammed with fantasies and enjoyment.” Previous month, Diallo shared a post for supporters to “enjoy me strip out of this gown.”
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Prior to her firing, Diallo was a element-time right after-school teacher and a agreement substitute, according to the Catalina Foothills Faculty District. She joined the college district in August 2023.
E! News has achieved out to Diallo for remark but has not read back again.
Diallo beforehand faced scrutiny when it was revealed that she experienced been lying about her race. Her estranged mothers and fathers came ahead to share that she was born white and grew up close to Troy, Mont., according to NBC Information.
At the time, she was fired from the NAACP and shed her educating publish in the African studies division at Jap Washington College.
Next the controversy, Diallo introduced the Peripheries Podcast and unveiled the ebook In Whole Colour: Acquiring My Position in a Black and White Entire world in 2017, in which she “describes the path that led her from being a little one of white evangelical mom and dad to an NAACP chapter president and highly regarded educator and activist who identifies as Black,” for every her book’s synopsis on Amazon.
“She recounts the deep psychological bond she shaped with her four adopted Black siblings,” the description reads, “the perception of belonging she felt although dwelling in Black communities in Jackson, Mississippi, and Washington, DC, and the activities that have shaped her alongside the way.”