Raquel Evita Saraswati's hoax: the activist who pretended to be Arab and Latina
The phony activist was part of an organization that fights against "violence, inequality and oppression." Carole Perone, her mother, revealed the truth about her daughter.
Raquel Evita Saraswati has been lying about her origins since 2004. The progressive activist is the director of equity, inclusion and culture for the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), an organization that claims to fight "violence, inequality and oppression." The truth is that Saraswati has been pretending to have "Arab, South Asian and Latin" roots for almost two decades.
The motives for the hoax are unknown. In a now deleted tweet, Saraswati assured that "as soon as I am capable, I will provide answers to the recent discussion and attack on me. I understand all the reactions you’re having. I am currently taking the time to get to where I can answer in a way that is most helpful and thorough more will come."
Her mother, Carole Perone, took it upon herself to uncover the truth of her daughter's charade in statements to The Intercept:
Oskar Pierre Castro, who hired Saraswati to head the American Friends Service Committee department, said he felt cheated:
However, AFSC continues to support its director. Layne Mullett, spokesperson for the organization, said:
This is not the first hoax of this kind. In an interview with Rosana Rábago of Voz Media in November, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Kent Frank Furedi talked about several people who have pretended to have a certain racial background. One of them was Sacheen Littlefeather, the actress who accepted Marlon Brando's Oscar on his behalf at the Academy Awards in 1973. When she took the stage, she lied about her origins, saying she was of Native American descent when she was not. There was also the case of Rachel Dolezal, an activist with Caucasian parents who defines herself as "black or mixed race.”