Kappa Kappa Gamma (KKG), a sorority that claims to “unite women to learn, grow and inspire positive change throughout their lives” – may soon claim the dubious distinction of becoming the first sorority to elect a boy as to president of his national organization, according to a lawsuit filed by angry KKG alumni.
The sisters of the fraternity filed the lawsuit this Thursday for the organization “diversity and inclusion” commitment to accept as members “people who identify as women”.
“Currently, the candidate has applied for, and is being considered for, a leadership position to be voted through an online election in April 2024,” the lawsuit says, according to the daily thread. “That position could include being elected to the Fraternity Council or even KKG president. Most members don't know the candidate is a man.”
Tracy Nadzieja, a man, was “elected as Arizona State University (ASU) district director in 2022,” the Wire reports. “KKG accepted Nadzieja as an initiated alumna in 2020, becoming the first male member of the fraternity.”
In 2018, Nadzieja achieved another first when he was appointed to the Maricopa County Superior Court in 2018, making him Arizona's first transgender judicial officer.
Prior to his transition, Nadzieja was a Sigma Pi sorority boy while attending ASU for his undergraduate degree.
He is also “a board member of one-n-ten, a Phoenix-based nonprofit focused on advancing LGBTQ ideologies in minors and youth,” according to the Daily Wire. “One-n-ten offered peer support program to gender transitioning children at Phoenix Children's Hospital.”
To live her life as “Tracy”, Nadzieja abandoned her children and her wife of 15 years.
“I just have to face it and if that means I'm thrown out of the house, that my marriage is over, that I won't have a relationship with my children, I'd rather have a real life despite losing everything that I have. I had worked all my life,” said Nadzieja at the Greek University.
(Video: YouTube)
Nadzieja did not meet KKG's qualifications as set forth in its bylaws when he was “fast-tracked” into a leadership position and appointed an advisor to a college chapter, according to the lawsuit, filed on behalf of the alumna KKG Patsy Levang, Cheryl Tuck. -Smith, Susan Jennings, Margo Knorr, Karen Pope, and Ann Witt.
In addition, the KKG Fraternity Council “deceptively misrepresented” Nadzieja as a woman who was qualified for a leadership position, the suit alleges.
“The Fraternity Council intentionally concealed this fact from the membership to ensure that the candidate was elected,” he says.
The alumni are being represented by the Independent Women's Law Center (IWLC), which is linked to the Independent Women's Forum (IWF).
Levang, a former president of the KKG National Foundation, and Tuck-Smith were kicked out of the fraternity for national leadership after more than 50 years of membership each. His crime? They spoke out against allowing men to join their brotherhood.
“Current Kappa leadership has deliberately engaged in a campaign to undermine Kappa's bylaws that harms not only these young women, but the entire organization,” Levang said in an ILWC press release announcing the lawsuit . “I'm not surprised they also ignored the value of lifetime membership and my 56 years of dedication by sending me a termination letter.”
“It is incomprehensible that the current leadership would dismiss this success by prioritizing men over women,” Tuck-Smith said. “Kappa must stay true to its current mission of supporting and promoting women.”
“The student's lawsuit accused KKG officials of violating the organization's regulatory rules, engaging in fraudulent activity, violating free speech laws, committing defamation and breach of contract,” reports the Daily Wire . “The KKG's bylaws, rules and policies state that only women may be members of the organization, although strict prohibitions against male participation are implemented.”
“Kappa's leadership continues to disrespect its members by not only denying them the single-sex organization they were promised, but by attacking in hopes of silencing the truth,” said ILWC attorney May Mailman.
In August, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by KKG sorority sisters, including Levang and Tuck-Smith, over the admission of Artemis Langford to the Wyoming chapter.
Langford was described as a transgender “voyeur” who made inappropriate comments and stared at KKG women for hours, sometimes with an erection.
Judge throws out sorority sisters' lawsuit, transgender “peeping” will be allowed to stay https://t.co/T9Rmq2RR79 road @BIZPACRevision
— Based on BPR (@DumpstrFireNews) August 29, 2023
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