Two local diversity advocates in Arizona are taking heat after calling a school district racist for hiring a DJ to perform in black face — but it turns out the DJ was black.
Stuart Rhoden and Jill Lassen — who specialize in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion — lambasted the Scottsdale Unified School District’s Hopi Elementary PTA for their decision to hire Kim Koko Hunter, 56, a local black DJ, at a charity event.
Both Rhoden and Lassen, who are involved in diversity work in the school district, slammed the school after seeing a picture of Hunter, only to later learn his race, according to the Arizona Daily Independent.
“The DJ that the Hopi PTA hire[d] was, in fact a Black man,” Hopi PTA president Megan Livengood wrote in response to Lassen in a message obtained by the outlet. “It is insulting that you feel myself or PTA condone racist behavior or encourage it by posting on social media.”
According to the Independent, Lassen, a librarian, responded by saying: “You are right, we should’ve reached out and inquired before making such accusations. I cannot fathom the hurt, anger and frustration you felt after you and others volunteered countless hours on your event. Again I truly apologize.”
The school district hired Kim Koko Hunter for a charity event in Arizona.
@kimkokohunter/Instagram
Hunter played at the Hopi Elementary PTA’s “Hopi Night Fever” fundraiser on April 9.
@kimkokohunter/Instagram
But Rhoden, who is an instructor at Arizona State University, did not appear particularly apologetic and posted a side-by-side image of Hunter on Facebook to try to show that the DJ darkened his face even if he is black.
“Let me be clear, a black man, apparently in black face is an entirely different discussion than a White person,” he wrote on Facebook. “However… it seems at the very least he is in darker make-up if not ‘Black face’ or I am completely mistaken and it’s the lighting of the patio.”
Rhoden is a member of the district’s Equity and Inclusion Committee and Lassen is a co-chair of the Scottsdale Parent Council diversity, equity and inclusion committee.
According to Hunter’s Facebook Live, an organizer called someone he works with following the event and asked if he was black.
“They thought that the DJ there or the person there was in a black face, and the person that they thought was in black face was me,” Hunter said.
“Wait a minute, in their defense” he said to his friend on the Facebook live with him, “how many chips in the ice cream did you see?”
“They were probably thinking the same thing I am: wow there are no black people here,” he said laughing.
Hunter then ridiculed the accusation that he was a black man doing black face.
“Was I not Black enough? How black do I got to be for people to know that I’m an actual Black person,” he said.
Rhoden and the Scottsdale school district did not return requests for comment. Lassen could not be immediately reached.
* story by The New York Post