SPOKANE, Wash. -- Rachel Dolezal resigned as president of the NAACP's Spokane chapter Monday days after her parents said she is a white woman posing as black -- a swift fall for an activist credited with injecting remarkable new energy into the civil-rights organization.
The furor touched off debate around the country over racial identity and divided the NAACP itself.
"In the eye of this current storm, I can see that a separation of family and organizational outcomes is in the best interest of the NAACP," Dolezal, elected the chapter's president last fall, wrote on the group's Facebook page. "Please know I will never stop fighting for human rights."
Dolezal, a 37-year-old woman with a light brown complexion and dark curly hair, graduated from historically black Howard University, teaches African studies at a local university and was married to a black man. For years, she described herself as black and complained of being the victim of racial hatred in the heavily white region.
The uproar that led to her resignation began last week after Dolezal's parents said their daughter is white with a trace of Native American heritage. They produced photos of her as girl with fair skin and straight blond hair.
Her mother, Ruthanne Dolezal of Troy, Montana, said she has had no contact with her daughter in several years. She said Rachel began to "disguise herself" as black after her parents adopted four black children more than a decade ago.
Rachel Dolezal initially dismissed the controversy, saying it arose from a legal dispute that has divided the family, and sidestepped questions about her race. "That question is not as easy as it seems," she said.
Last week, the national NAACP stood by her. But Dolezal came under increasing pressure from local chapter members to resign. Kitara Johnson, an NAACP member in Spokane, welcomed the resignation as "the best thing that can happen right now."
Johnson said she hopes Dolezal remains a member of the organization.
"She knows her stuff," Johnson said.
Dolezal has been widely credited with reinvigorating Spokane's moribund NAACP chapter. In resigning, she boasted that under her leadership, the chapter acquired an office, increased membership, improved finances and made other improvements.
"The NAACP is not concerned with the racial identity of our leadership," Cornell William Brooks, national president of the NAACP, said in a statement Monday. Dolezal "has decided to resign to ensure that the Spokane branch remains focused on fighting for civil and human rights."
The controversy drew conflicting views from other NAACP leaders.
"I care that she was trying to make the world a better place every day," said Frank Hawkins Jr., the NAACP president in Las Vegas. "The color of a person's skin does not matter."
Don Harris, a white man who heads the NAACP in the Phoenix area, criticized her, saying: "What do you gain in saying, 'I'm an African-American' when you're not?"
Dolezal has not returned numerous calls to her home and offices from The Associated Press.
In 2002, Dolezal sued Howard University, where she attended graduate school, for discrimination based on "race, pregnancy, family responsibilities and gender, as well as retaliation," according to a 2005 District of Columbia Court of Appeals ruling in the case.
Dolezal, who then went by her married name, Rachel Moore, claimed the university blocked her appointment as a teaching assistant, failed to hire her as an art teacher upon graduation and removed some of her pieces from a student art exhibition in favor of works by African American students. The appeals court upheld a lower court's ruling throwing out the lawsuit.
Dolezal was fired Monday as a weekly columnist for The Pacific Northwest Inlander, Spokane's alternative weekly.
City officials are investigating whether she lied about her ethnicity when she landed an appointment to Spokane's police oversight board. On her application, she said her ethnic origins included white, black and American Indian.
On Friday, police said they were suspending investigations into racial harassment complaints filed by Dolezal before the uproar, including one from earlier this year in which she said she received hate mail at her NAACP office.
Police released files showing that one package did not bear a date stamp or barcode, meaning it was probably not handled through the post office.
Dolezal's parents appeared on the "Today" show Monday and said they hope to reconcile with their daughter.
"We hope that Rachel will get the help that she needs to deal with her identity issues. Of course, we love her," her mother said.
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