SEE...IT'S TRUE............once you go black you won't go back!!
NAACP leader of Washington state chapter Rachel Dolezal leaned on adoptive kid brothers to help her lie about being black BY NANCY DILLON , RACHELLE BLIDNER , JASON SILVERSTEIN , LARRY MCSHANE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Published: Friday, June 12, 2015, 1:23 AM Updated: Friday, June 12, 2015, 7:57 PM A A A
 NAACP Leader of Washington State Chapter Lied About Being Black, Parents Say NY Daily News

Living a lie was full-time work for Rachel Dolezal, the Montana-born white woman who in recent years moved through the world as a black civil rights activist.
Dolezal, 37, head of the NAACP’s Spokane chapter since January, leaned on her two adoptive kid brothers — both African-American — to abet her long-running racial ruse.
She posted a picture of a black couple on her Facebook page, announcing them as her parents — while her real mom and pop were actually white and living in Montana.
The African studies instructor eventually severed ties with her biological parents, telling a local television station they hadn’t spoken in years.
AP PHOTO/NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS/COURTESY LARRY DOLEZALRachel Dolezal was born to white parents of European descent, as is clear from a picture from her youth (r.), but has used makeup and fixed her hair so as to appear African American, her parents said. “What I say to them is, ‘I don’t give two sh---- about what you guys think,’” she said in a Thursday interview with KREM-TV. “You’re so far done and gone out of my life ... I do not talk to (them) anymore.”
Sibling Ezra recalled how his sister asked him not to “blow my cover” before a 2012 visit, and then criticized her strange double-life as akin to wearing blackface.
“She’s basically creating more racism,” he told The Washington Post. “It’s a farce, really, is what it is.”
Lawrence and Ruthanne Dolezal confirmed their daughter, who leads the NAACP chapter in Spokane, is a white woman who always liked to identify with African-American culture. #RACHELDOLEZAL HASHTAG DISPLAYS TWITTER USERS' BEST MATERIAL
But Dolozel, in her TV interview, didn’t hesitate when asked asked if she identified herself as African-American despite her family tree.
“I don’t like the term African-American,” she said. “I prefer black. If it was asked, I would definitely say I do consider myself to be black.”

 NAACP Leader in Washington Lied |