Nkechi Diallo Biography: Age, Height, Parents, Husband, Children, Net Worth

Nkechi Diallo Biography: Age, Height, Parents, Husband, Children, Net Worth

Nkechi Diallo Biography, Age, Height, Parents, Husband, Children, Net Worth – Former American college instructor and activist, Rachel Anne Dolezal, well known as Nkechi Amare Diallo was born on November 12, 1977, in Lincoln County, Montana in the United States of America.

Wiki

Name: Rachel Anne Dolezal
Date of Birth: November 12, 1977
Husband: Kevin Moore (2000-2005)
Nationality: American
Occupation: Instructor and activist
Net Worth: $600,000

Nkechi Diallo Nationality

Diallo was born in Lincoln County, Montana in the United States of America. She is an American.

Nkechi Diallo Height and Weight

Diallo stands at a height of 5ft 4 inches or 1.65m tall and weighs 60kg.

Nkechi Diallo Family and Siblings

Diallo was born to Ruthane Dolezal and Lawrence Dolezal. She has an elder brother named Joshua Dolezal.

Nkechi Diallo Educational Background

Diallo was raised in Troy in the Pentecostal faith. She then attended Howard University, a historically black college in Washington, D.C.; she received a Master of Fine Arts, summa cum laude, from Howard in 2002.

Nkechi Diallo Career

The “Triumph of the Human Spirit” fountain sculpture by Diallo included dancing, joyous people higher up the column, and sorrowful, dejected characters at its foot.

June 2005 saw its installation in Spokane’s downtown, and the Human Rights Education Institute benefited from its subsequent auction.

In 2007, Diallo then an art teacher at School Indigo in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho worked with kids to create five pieces for the Human Rights Education Institute’s “Rights of the Child” exhibit.

Diallo was accused of plagiarism in June 2015 by Sarah Cascone at Artnet and Priscilla Frank at The Huffington Post.

The Shape of Our Kind, a painting by Diallo, was said to resemble The Slave Ship, an 1840 piece by J. M. W. Turner, almost exactly. Frank charged Diallo with copying without giving Turner proper credit.

According to a July 2010 newspaper report, Diallo had left his position as the Human Rights Institute’s education director in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, after two years in that role.

Diallo said that after the organization’s board rejected her application to become executive director, she was “for all intents and purposes” forced to leave.

In 2014, Diallo succeeded James Wilburn as head of the NAACP chapter in Spokane. She was credited with bringing life to the chapter throughout her brief stint.

On June 15, 2015, she announced her resignation from the civil rights organization following the public disclosure of the debate concerning her racial identification.

In May 2014, Diallo submitted an application to be the head of the Spokane Office of the Police Ombudsman Commission. Mayor David Condon then selected Diallo for the job. She stated on her application that she was of multiple ethnicities, including Black.

Ben Stuckart, the president of the City Council, announced in June 2015 that the city had begun looking into whether or not her application was truthful.

On June 17, 2015, the investigation came to the conclusion that Dolezal had behaved unlawfully, broken government regulations, and abused her power. The report stated that the evidence and interviews supported claims of workplace harassment and “a pattern of misconduct” on the part of Dolezal.

Due to “intimidating and harassing” behavior, Condon and Stuckart urged Diallo to retire. The Spokane City Council unanimously decided on June 18, 2015, to remove Diallo from her role as the Police Ombudsman Commission head.

“Since 2010, Diallo has been hired at Eastern Washington University on a quarter-by-quarter basis as an instructor in the Africana Education program,” the university said in a 2015 statement.

The purpose of this part-time job is to meet program demands. Diallo is not an academic. She spoke on “The Black Woman’s Struggle”, “African and African American Art History”, “African History”, “African American Culture”, as well as “Intro to Africana Studies”.

On June 15, 2015, Diallo was described as “no longer an employee of Eastern Washington University” in a statement from the university. She listed herself as a “professor” on multiple websites, even though she isn’t one.

Diallo regularly contributed to Spokane’s alternative weekly newspaper, The Inlander. In March 2017, she published a memoir titled In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World, which discussed her racial identity.

The Arizona Daily Star revealed in February 2024 that Diallo had been let go from her teaching job in Tucson’s Catalina Foothills Unified School District after the district’s administrators found out about her activities on the adult-oriented social media site OnlyFans.

 

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Nkechi Diallo Husband

Diallo was married to Kevin Moore from 2000 to 2005. Her current relationship status is not known to us at the moment.

Nkechi Diallo Children

Diallo has a son named Franklin Moore.

Nkechi Diallo Net Worth

Diallo has a net worth estimated to be about $600,000 as of 2024. She is believed to have amassed her impressive net worth from her previous profession as a college instructor and as an activist and she is known for presenting herself as a black woman despite being born to white parents. She is also a former National Association for the Advancement of Col ored People (NAACP) chapter president.

Source: Ngnews247.com

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