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I find fault with how your friend was treated above - though he shouldn't have lied. I have a good friend that is 1/2 Puerto Rican, 1/2 Irish. She grew up in a middle of nowhere Southern town, and then a middle of nowhere midwestern town (aka mostly white). Her dad never spoke spanish to her, and she never interacted with the Hispanic community. She indeed acts very white - but as she is an actress, often gets typecasted into Hispanic roles (aka - pregnant hispanic girl). Should she or shouldn't she have marked "hispanic" on her application. If the interview started asking talking to her in spanish or asking about her work with hispanic communities - she got nothing. But her "ethnicity/race/whatever" is clearly hispanic. [btw - you bet your bottom she marked herself as Hispanic. She went to a top Midwest "Ivy" for college on a full ride... and it was one of those schools were no one got a full ride]While it's true that some people get away with it, this is not always the case and you do not want to be the one student they decide to make an example of. I knew a classmate who I knew well do this, he was white as white could be and checked off Hispanic on his AMCAS. His first Interview was at Einstein, his interviewer called him out on it. He started to talk to him in Spanish. When he couldn't reply, the interviewer asked him, if he had ever lived in a Hispanic community or lived outside the US. He said no and the interviewer went on to say "how can you relate to a culture you cannot communicate with or know nothing about the struggles of. You have no idea what it means to be Hispanic" and was offended by the students actions. The interviewer WAS Hispanic.
This guy did Not get into Einstein or did he get any other interviews after that (his stats were 3.6 and a 30s). He also received a letter in the mail from AMCAS regarding the situation and an explanation on why AMCAS has changed his Application to White, Non-Hispanic. Not sure more to the story than that, but it should be enough to know that you shouldn't lie about something like this. Do not take away from the struggles of another culture just for your gain. Just because your grandparents were from a different country does not mean that you inherit their beliefs, struggles or views. Be honest about who it is you identify with and make sure it is for the right reasons. If you infact identify with Hispanics then put it, but if you have to think about it, chances are you are really don't.
Meanwhile, I'm a european mutt that includes atleast one spanish great(-great)-grandparent. I have many relatives [my grandma, aunt and brother] that get super dark in the summer, and often people mistake them for being hispanic (strangers talk to them in spanish). I took spanish in HS and grew up in a very latino neighborhood. I could pass myself off as Hispanic [my brother even more so than me] if the interviewer tried to "question" my ethnicity by the way you describe above. I'm sure many people could. But I know I am white, and was honest on my AMCAS. Now... if the Spanish ancestry was more recent... who knows, I might consider myself Hispanic.
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