Over the past few months, Camila Cabello’s old racist posts have been resurfacing online, and it’s not sitting well with her former Fifth Harmony bandmate Normani Kordei.
WATCH: Normani is gorgeous in green at the 2019 KIIS FM Jingle Ball
In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Normani discusses how the initial posts affected her in 2012. The post contained the n-word and other racist slurs.
Twitter user @motivatefenty has posted a bunch of the old posts on Twitter.
Normani initially said she would think about the question before answering it, later sending a statement to the publication that read:
“I want to be very clear about what I’m going to say on this uncomfortable subject and figured it would be best to write out my thoughts to avoid being misconstrued, as I have been in the past,” she wrote in the email. “I struggled with talking about this because I didn’t want it to be a part of my narrative, but I am a black woman, who is a part of an entire generation that has a similar story.”
“I face senseless attacks daily, as does the rest of my community. This represents a day in the life for us. I have been tolerating discrimination far before I could even comprehend what exactly was happening,” she continued. “Direct and subliminal hatred has been geared towards me for many years solely because of the color of my skin. It would be dishonest if I said that this particular scenario didn’t hurt me.”
Normani also expressed how disappointed she was in Camila over how long it took for her to address it.
“It was devastating that this came from a place that was supposed to be a safe haven and a sisterhood, because I knew that if the tables were turned I would defend each of them in a single heartbeat,” Normani wrote. “It took days for her to acknowledge what I was dealing with online and then years for her to take responsibility for the offensive tweets that recently resurfaced. Whether or not it was her intention, this made me feel like I was second to the relationship that she had with her fans.”
Now, she’s hopeful that Camila has grown from these mistakes.
“I don’t want to say that this situation leaves me hopeless because I believe that everyone deserves the opportunity for personal growth. I really hope that an important lesson was learned in this. I hope there is genuine understanding about why this was absolutely unacceptable. I have spoken what is in my heart and pray this is transparent enough that I never have to speak on it again,” she wrote. “To my brown men and women, we are like no other. Our power lies within our culture. We are descendants of an endless line of strong and resilient kings and queens. We have been and will continue to win in all that we do simply because of who we are. We deserve to be celebrated, I deserve to be celebrated and I’m just getting started.”
In December 2019, Camila apologised for her past.
“When I was younger, I used language that I’m deeply ashamed of and will regret forever,” she wrote on Twitter. “I was uneducated and ignorant and once I became aware of the history and the weight and the true meaning behind this horrible and hurtful language, I was deeply embarrassed I ever used it. I apologized then and I apologize again now.”
Below you can see a bunch of the racist posts Camila made at the time…