Cedric The Entertainer Response To Ronda Rousey Being Black Is Priceless

by | Mar 25, 2016 | Celebrities | 0 comments

Ronda Rousey’s mom just dropped a nugget on the former champion’s heritage and it’s pretty awesome. She hinted at the fact that Ronda Rousey’s great-grandfather is a well know black man. This sent twitter and facebook into a craze by saying Ronda Rousey is now black and should have black privileges. Not all black celebrities are feeling that. Checkout Cedric The Entertainer response about the situation.

TMZ caught Rousey in LA recently and asked the UFC superstar what was the last movie she’d seen. Rousey politely told the cameraman that she would prefer to continue spending time with her mother and sister than conduct an interview, but momma Rousey was more than happy to answer.

“‘Before His Time.’ It’s about my grandfather, Ronda’s great-grandfather. They show it during Black History Month every year in Canada because he was one of the first black physicians in North America,” Dr. AnnMaria De Mars told TMZ.

The documentary covers the life of Dr. Alfred E. Waddell, a Trinidadian doctor who immigrated to Halifax, Canada, after laying down roots in New York. His bio on the White Pine Pictures (a Canadian production company), says this about Waddell:

The son of a headmaster, Alfred Waddell set out for New York in 1923 with his young bride Amelia Maria, dreaming of becoming a doctor.

The couple worked menial jobs to support themselves in New York. In 1928 Alfred left his family to study medicine at Dalhousie’s medical school in Halifax. Amelia Maria finally joined him with their 4 children. Graduating in 1933, he faced the suspicions of Halifax’s white and black communities who regarded him as an “outsider.” His practice took off slowly. Members of the Chinese community were among his first clients.

Despite his own hardships, Waddell treated many isolated people who had no access to medical care. Waddell brought medicine to far flung black communities; spoke out against injustice; and even billeted black musicians like Cab Calloway, when he could not get a hotel room. A champion of social equality, Dr. Waddell raised his children with ideas of fairness and earned the respect of an entire city.

Although he died of a heart attack before he could see many of the social changes he fought for, Alfred Waddell is remembered fondly his those who benefited from his advocacy.

Rousey and Dr. AnnMaria appear proud to be related to Waddell, and who wouldn’t be?

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