A United States professor who gained international attention after publishing a blog post in which she admitted to lying for years about being a Black person has resigned from the George Washington University, the school said.
Dr Jessica Krug, “has resigned her position, effective immediately. Her classes for this semester will be taught by other faculty members, and students in those courses will receive additional information this week”, GWU said on Twitter on Wednesday.
Krug, a history professor known for her writings on various Black-centred topics, gained notoriety after the online platform Medium published a posting in her name saying she was actually a white woman from suburban Kansas City.
Krug claimed she has lived most of her adult life “under various assumed identities within a Blackness that I had no right to claim: first North African Blackness, then US rooted Blackness, then Caribbean rooted Bronx Blackness.”
The blog post attributed to Krug expressed deep remorse, calling the deception “the very epitome of violence, of thievery and appropriation”.
The writer blamed “unaddressed mental health demons” dating back to childhood and says she frequently thought of confessing the deception, “but my cowardice was always more powerful than my ethics.”
The post caused an immediate furore on social media, with Black academics, writers and activists recalling their interactions with Krug.
Hari Ziyad, editor of the online publication RaceBaitr, which had published Krug’s writings, wrote on Twitter that Krug had confirmed the details of the blog post to him in a phone call Thursday morning. He described Krug as “someone I called a friend up until this morning when she gave me a call admitting to everything written here.”
Ziyad wrote that Krug claimed to be Afro-Caribbean and from the Bronx. He said he had defended Krug in the past against suspicious colleagues. In retrospect, he recalls clues to the deception including her “clearly inexpert salsa dancing” and “awful New York accent”.
Krug’s public persona comes across in a video testimony to a New York City Council hearing on gentrification from June. Referring to herself as Jess La Bombalera, Krug refers to “my Black and brown siblings” in the anti-gentrification movement and criticises “all these white New Yorkers” who “did not yield their time to Black and brown indigenous New Yorkers”.
Krug’s situation brought to mind the case of controversial US activist Rachel Dolezal, who made headlines in 2015 – and resigned from her post as president of the Spokane, Washington branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) – after saying she identified as Black, even though both of her parents are white.
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