Woman formerly known as Rachel Dolezal loses her teaching job over OnlyFans pics

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By Nasima Khatun

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A woman who presents herself as a Black woman has lost her teaching job over her OnlyFans career.

Nkechi Diallo (FKA Rachel Dolezal) first gained fame after she claimed that she was a light-skinned Black woman, undergoing a massive transformation using spray tans and perms.

Diallo - who changed her name back in 2017 - was recently fired from her teaching job at an elementary school in Arizona due to some explicit images from her OnlyFans doing the rounds on social media, as per a report from News4 Tucson.

Julie Farbarik, the district’s director of alumni and community relations confirmed the news stating that the posts are "contrary to our district’s Use of Social Media by District Employees policy and our staff ethics policy."

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Rachel Dolezal has been fired from her teaching job after her OnlyFans garnered some attention. Credit: Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto/Getty

"We only learned of Ms Nkechi Diallo’s OnlyFans social media posts yesterday afternoon," she added. "She is no longer employed by the Catalina Foothills school district."

According to The Independent, the 46-year-old initially launched her page on the explicit platform back in 2021 for $9.99 per month, offering her fans a look at fitness videos, hair tutorials, and "foot pics".

Things have now progressed to offering more risqué content which has included photos in lingerie, self-pleasuring videos, and - more recently - a Valentine's Day special that Dolezal took to the platform to promote.

"Happy Valentine’s Day fans... I dropped a package of love in your DMS," she wrote, as per the outlet.

And this is not the only special occasion package she has offered, as Outkick reported previous offers have seen everything from an "18-image explicit collection, AND a video of self-pleasure to orgasm under the Christmas tree" to "35 pics of DaBoo-Tay & 2 videos of the TaTa’s."

It comes as Dolezal has been receiving backlash ever since she claimed that she was a "trans-Black" woman, explaining to the Washington Post that despite being "biologically born white to white parents," she "[identifies] as Black."

In a separate interview with the Guardian, she said that her confession led to a barrage of hate being hurled towards her, but she only felt like she was being true to herself.

"I’m trying to regroup, rebuild, remember who I was before the frenzy. People telling me what to think, telling me what to do, telling me to go kill myself," she said back in 2015. "Locally, it feels like I am invisible. People don’t want to associate with me.

"It’s just like this disgust, and that was really hurtful, really hurtful," she added.

Elsewhere, she also opened up about feeling more confident as a "Black" woman.

"For me, how I feel is more powerful than how I was born. I mean that not in the sense of having some easy way out. This has been a lifelong journey. This is not something that I cash in, cash out, change up, do at a convenience level or to freak people out or to make people happy," she continued, before adding: "If somebody asked me how I identify, I identify as black. Nothing about whiteness describes who I am."

However, the former teacher's parents spoke out in an interview with the New York Times about her controversial identity, denying the fact that she could be Black in any way.

"She’s clearly our birth daughter, and we’re clearly Caucasian — that’s just a fact," her father Lawrence told the outlet at the time. "She is a very talented woman, doing work she believes in. Why can’t she do that as a Caucasian woman, which is what she is?"

Featured Image Credit: Budrul Chukrut/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty

Woman formerly known as Rachel Dolezal loses her teaching job over OnlyFans pics

vt-author-image

By Nasima Khatun

Article saved!Article saved!

A woman who presents herself as a Black woman has lost her teaching job over her OnlyFans career.

Nkechi Diallo (FKA Rachel Dolezal) first gained fame after she claimed that she was a light-skinned Black woman, undergoing a massive transformation using spray tans and perms.

Diallo - who changed her name back in 2017 - was recently fired from her teaching job at an elementary school in Arizona due to some explicit images from her OnlyFans doing the rounds on social media, as per a report from News4 Tucson.

Julie Farbarik, the district’s director of alumni and community relations confirmed the news stating that the posts are "contrary to our district’s Use of Social Media by District Employees policy and our staff ethics policy."

wp-image-1263249173 size-full
Rachel Dolezal has been fired from her teaching job after her OnlyFans garnered some attention. Credit: Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto/Getty

"We only learned of Ms Nkechi Diallo’s OnlyFans social media posts yesterday afternoon," she added. "She is no longer employed by the Catalina Foothills school district."

According to The Independent, the 46-year-old initially launched her page on the explicit platform back in 2021 for $9.99 per month, offering her fans a look at fitness videos, hair tutorials, and "foot pics".

Things have now progressed to offering more risqué content which has included photos in lingerie, self-pleasuring videos, and - more recently - a Valentine's Day special that Dolezal took to the platform to promote.

"Happy Valentine’s Day fans... I dropped a package of love in your DMS," she wrote, as per the outlet.

And this is not the only special occasion package she has offered, as Outkick reported previous offers have seen everything from an "18-image explicit collection, AND a video of self-pleasure to orgasm under the Christmas tree" to "35 pics of DaBoo-Tay & 2 videos of the TaTa’s."

It comes as Dolezal has been receiving backlash ever since she claimed that she was a "trans-Black" woman, explaining to the Washington Post that despite being "biologically born white to white parents," she "[identifies] as Black."

In a separate interview with the Guardian, she said that her confession led to a barrage of hate being hurled towards her, but she only felt like she was being true to herself.

"I’m trying to regroup, rebuild, remember who I was before the frenzy. People telling me what to think, telling me what to do, telling me to go kill myself," she said back in 2015. "Locally, it feels like I am invisible. People don’t want to associate with me.

"It’s just like this disgust, and that was really hurtful, really hurtful," she added.

Elsewhere, she also opened up about feeling more confident as a "Black" woman.

"For me, how I feel is more powerful than how I was born. I mean that not in the sense of having some easy way out. This has been a lifelong journey. This is not something that I cash in, cash out, change up, do at a convenience level or to freak people out or to make people happy," she continued, before adding: "If somebody asked me how I identify, I identify as black. Nothing about whiteness describes who I am."

However, the former teacher's parents spoke out in an interview with the New York Times about her controversial identity, denying the fact that she could be Black in any way.

"She’s clearly our birth daughter, and we’re clearly Caucasian — that’s just a fact," her father Lawrence told the outlet at the time. "She is a very talented woman, doing work she believes in. Why can’t she do that as a Caucasian woman, which is what she is?"

Featured Image Credit: Budrul Chukrut/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty