A woman caught on video calling a 5-year-old Black autistic child a racial slur at a public playground in Rochester has now received over $700,000 in donations. It surely has to raise serious concerns about the growing financial rewards for public displays of racism.
The woman, identified online as Shiloh Hendrix, became a national flashpoint last week after footage of her using the N-word toward a child went viral. The backlash was swift, but so was the response from a certain segment of the internet: within days, crowdfunding campaigns on GiveSendGo and similar platforms began pulling in tens of thousands of dollars. Now, the figure has ballooned to well over $700,000, with some supporters pushing for a million-dollar goal.
“Dire Situation” or Profitable Outrage?
On her GiveSendGo page, Hendrix claims she and her family are being “harassed and threatened” following the release of the video. She says she’s been forced to flee her home and that the money will go toward relocation and “security.”
But critics are pointing out the obvious: security and relocation don’t cost three-quarters of a million dollars. And the page, which initially sought just $20,000, was quietly updated multiple times to raise its goal as donations poured in.
In other words, a white woman used a racial slur against a Black child, and instead of being held accountable, she’s being made wealthy.
This doesn’t feel like someone making a mistake and seeking forgiveness. It feels more like a calculated rallying cry. It’s part of a disturbing pattern where public shaming, especially around race, gets twisted into a kind of weaponized victimhood. People are actively funding this behavior, propping it up with donations as if to defend a version of America they’re worried is slipping away.
Indeed, many of the public comments left by donors before they were disabled referenced “free speech,” “anti-woke resistance,” and more explicitly, praise for Hendrix’s behavior. Some donors used racist language themselves, celebrating the incident as a stand against “reverse racism” and “leftist cancel culture.”
GiveSendGo, the Christian crowdfunding platform hosting the campaign, has refused to take it down. In a statement to The Washington Post, the company said it “does not endorse or condone” the views of its users, but emphasized its commitment to allowing campaigns “even when controversial.”
That “controversial” behavior includes publicly targeting a five-year-old child with a slur.
The Cameraman’s History, Weaponized
Complicating the story further is the identity of the man who filmed the incident: Mohamed Omer, a local Rochester resident who was previously charged in a 2022 sexual assault case, though the charges were later dropped. His legal history has since been weaponized by Hendrix’s supporters as a way to deflect blame and paint her as the true victim.
Surely, one can condemn the man’s disturbing history and still recognize that what this woman did to that child was disgusting and indefensible. This isn’t some “choose-your-side” drama… It’s two ugly truths at once. And the fact that she’s being financially rewarded for it is honestly terrifying.
So far, no legal action has been taken against Hendrix, though local child protection services are reportedly aware of the situation. Meanwhile, the playground where the incident took place remains under scrutiny, and the family of the child has yet to make a public statement.
For now, a woman is getting rich off racism, a reality that has left many across the country disturbed, outraged, and wondering how we got here.