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Entertainment > Entertainment
White 'African Americans'(225)
'White African-American' Suing N.J. Med School for DiscriminationPaulo Serodio Says He Was Harassed, Assaulted After Defining Himself as African-AmericanCan a white guy be African-American? Paulo Serodio says he is. Born and raised in Mozambique and now a naturalized U.S. citizen, Serodio, 45, has filed a lawsuit against a New Jersey medical school, claiming he was harassed and ultimately suspended for identifying himself during a class cultural exercise as a "white African-American." "I wouldn't wish this to my worst enemy," he said. "I'm not exaggerating. This has destroyed my life, my career." The lawsuit, which asks for Serodio's reinstatement at the school and monetary damages, named the Newark-based University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and several doctors and university employees as defendants. Filed Monday in U.S. District Court in New Jersey, the lawsuit traces a series of events that Serodio maintains led to his 2007 suspension, starting with a March 2006 cultural exercise in a clinical skills course taught by Dr. Kathy Ann Duncan, where each student was asked to define themselves for a discussion on culture and medicine. After Serodio labeled himself as a white African-American, another student said she was offended by his comments and that, because of his white skin, was not an African-American. According to the lawsuit, Serodio was summoned to Duncan's office where he was instructed "never to define himself as an African-American … because it was offensive to others and to people of color for him to do so." "It's crazy," Serodio's attorney Gregg Zeff told ABCNews.com. "Because that's what he is." Serodio, who lives in Newark, said he never meant to offend anyone and calling himself African-American doesn't detract from another person's heritage. Neither the American Civil Liberties Union nor the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People responded to messages seeking comment on the meaning of African-American. The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary defines African-American as "an American of African and especially of black African descent." "There are people of all races who are African," Serodio said, adding that he's never had a problem identifying himself as an African-American until that day in Duncan's class. Zeff pointed out that Serodio only labeled himself after his instructors asked him to do so and was then penalized for it. Defending an Identity or Unprofessional Behavior?Serodio said he is a third-generation African of Portuguese ethnicity whose great-grandfather emigrated to Mozambique. He came to the U.S. in 1984 after being accepted at New York University. He met his future wife and started a family and, after deciding to settle in the U.S. permanently, got his citizenship in the early 1990s. After doing research work on and off, including for UMDNJ, with pauses in between to be a stay-at-home dad, Serodio said he decided to become a doctor to follow in his parents footsteps. His plan, he said, was to become a doctor and join Doctors Without Borders where he could travel back to Africa to do charity work like his parents, either as an internist or possibly a neurologist. He started medical school, he said, when his eldest child was in first grade. The family, he said, had hoped to hold a joint graduation party this spring– for his son's passing out of fourth grade and for Serodio's graduation from medical school. But they will only be celebrating his son's achievements this year. The lawsuit claims Serodio began to be harassed by other students who sought disciplinary action against him for his statement in Duncan's class, but was never given a chance to defend his views against the complaints. UMDNJ spokesman Jeffrey Tolvin told ABCNews.com that university officials had not yet seen the lawsuit. We have no comment on this matter," he said. In September 2006, Serodio said he again asked to define himself culturally as part of another course exercise. Again, according to the lawsuit he said he was a "white African-American." And again, he was called to the course instructor's office and told never to define himself that way again. According to the lawsuit, Serodio then wrote an article for the student newspaper, titled "A More Colorful View Than Black and White," in an attempt to explain his self-identification and to call for tolerance at the school. But when complaints started pouring into Dr. I. Thomas Cohen, then the dean of student affairs, the lawsuit alleges that Serodio was called in again and told by Cohen that if he "lay low for awhile" Cohen would see that a record of the incident would not be placed in Serodio's transcript. Serodio told ABCNews.com that he believes that America has outgrown the labels of black and white, something he wrote about in the article. His own children, he said, are of mixed ethnicity – European and Chinese. In his own case, he said, "There's a distinction to be made here between ethnicity and being from Africa." To read full story click here-> http://www.abcnews.go.com/US/Story?id=7567291&page=1 |
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Okay .. a couple of things ... a) why would anybody be "offended" by some white guy wanting to claim African American being that he's part African ... is it that serious folks? b) why would any school ENTERTAIN the idea of instructing a student to "NEVER IDENTIFY" yourself that way? If they would have just simply laughed it off w/o commentary perhaps this frivoulous lawsuit wouldn't exist. c) how can he argue the point that he is African American and then turn around and say his children are of EUROPEAN and Chinese descent. Silliness all the way around to me. HOWEVER -- I do have an old friend in WY who is "white" Eygptian, but identified himself African American once he became an American citizen ... go figure. Â
ferociously ...... PANK!!! |
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I guess I can understand if the man was trying to game the system. To try to declare he is entitled to some advantage via claiming some special connection to BLACK foks born and bred in this country. But I DISAGREE that the man deserve to be harrassed and then SUSPENDED all because he stated the TRUTH about what he is. |
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Two 'White African Americans'Â Sorry folks, it is what it is...we as 'Blacks' do not own the patent on being African-American...
![]() Actress Charlize Theron ![]() Ketchup Queen Teresa Heinz-Kerry --------------------------------------------- ![]() SHUT....UP! Follow me... http://www.twitter.com/nakialjackson |
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That is exactly why I don't identify myself as "African" American. I'm a Black American. And Africa is a continent not a country or a nationality. Now if I had any idea which country my ancestors were from, I could possibly identify with that country. But since we haven't been able to trace our history back to a specific country, I just live with knowing that somewhere in the past, my people lived on the continent.
I will not identify myself with a whole continent - "The world's second-largest and second most-populous next to Asia. It covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area, with a billion people (as of 2009), in 61 territories, it accounts for about 14.8% of the World's human population.The continent is surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the northeast, the Indian Ocean to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west. Not counting the disputed territory of Western Sahara, there are 53 countries, including Madagascar and various island groups, associated with the continent. Africa straddles the equator and encompasses numerous climate areas; it is the only continent to stretch from the northern temperate to southern temperate zones." |
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