What Is Clarence Thomas's Ethnicity?
Clarence was born to a family belonging to the African-American ethnicity.
He was born in 1948 in Pin Point, Georgia, a small, mostly black village near Savannah created after the Civil War by freedmen as the second of three children born to farm worker M. C. Thomas and domestic worker Leola "Pigeon" Williams.
They were slave descendants, and the family spoke Gullah as their first language. Thomas had a rough childhood and was raised by a single mother as his father abandoned his mother, elder sister, and him when he was two years old.
As a single working mother, his mother struggled to make ends meet, especially after having another son after Thomas' father left.
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Being an African-American was not easy for him as he used to a lot of backlashes and racist comments.
He was the school's first black student and felt the burden of being the single representation of his race during his time there. Although Thomas had excellent grades, he struggled with the racially charged bullying he endured.
His dream was to become a Catholic priest, but Thomas was troubled by the Catholic Church's apathetic approach to civil rights. Soon after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s killing in 1968, he decided to give up his aspiration of becoming a priest and went on to become a lawyer to serve justice.
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