AITAH for telling my coworker that I have no interest in visiting her home country?

A 36-year-old openly gay man has always kept a friendly, professional relationship with his 33-year-old Nigerian coworker, Nadia. She visits Nigeria twice a year and enjoys sharing photos and stories upon her return. He’s been polite for years, smiling and saying “maybe someday” when she enthusiastically urges him to travel there and recommends restaurants, knowing he loves food.

This time, she pushed harder — insisting he “can’t keep putting it off” and handing him a detailed list of must-visit places. When he finally said he would never go, she rolled her eyes and remarked that American men only want Europe or South America, never “the mother land.” He calmly explained his reason: Nigeria criminalizes homosexuality, and he travels with his partner. He refuses to vacation somewhere he can’t safely be himself. The next day, she filed an HR complaint accusing him of discriminatory comments about her nationality. Now he’s left wondering if he crossed a line.

‘AITAH for telling my coworker that I have no interest in visiting her home country?’

Their usual dynamic has always been positive and light:

I (36M) work in an office with a coworker (33F) and until recently, our work environment has been pretty friendly, which has me questioning whether or not I’m truly an...

My coworker Nadia (not her real name) just came back from vacation in her home country yesterday. She is from Nigeria and visits about twice a year. Each time she...

and loves to show me pictures from her trip. I can see the joy it brings her, so I usually just go along with it and tell her how happy...

However, every time she talks about the vacation, she tells me I have to visit and gives me a bunch of recommendations for food places since she knows I’m a...

This time the pressure increased:

This time, after showing me the pictures, Nadia gave me a list of places to go to and said that I have to go soon while we can still travel...

This time, I flat out told her that I wouldn’t be going. Nadia rolled her eves and said “American men always want to travel to Europe and South America, but...

When she said this, I was pretty taken aback. For context, I’m an openly gay ethnically Caribbean man. Nadia knows this, has met my partner at work events, and has...

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I spent half of my childhood/adolescence in the Caribbean in a really h__ophobic environment. I have seen gay men there brutally assaulted, some have even gone missing

and their families have kept it under wraps because they never wanted their neighbors to know they had a queer child. I constantly had to be looking over my shoulder...

He made his position very clear:

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I asked Nadia if she knew that being gay was still criminalized there. She said “Yes, but it’s mainly s__ual acts that are punished, so if you avoid that you...

I told her that if I’m going on vacation, I’m going with my partner, and I have no interest in going on vacation to a place where I can’t be...

I said that it would make no sense to spend that much money to not feel safe and I’d rather just go to places where I can relax and not...

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The situation escalated quickly:

Nadia paused and said “Oh… okay…” and went back to her desk. I thought that was the end of it, but the next day my supervisor called me to their...

They informed me that they had gotten a complaint about me for “discriminatory comments regarding someone’s nationality”, that I was being written up and a formal complaint would be escalated...

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He refused to back down:

I explained the situation to the supervisor and he said he understood where I was coming from and would not escalate the complaint, but still wanted me to sign the...

I told him that I would not be signing anything, that despite being openly gay I should never have had to disclose my s__ual orientation to him in the first...

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and that if I was ever called into his office for something this stupid again I would have nothing to say but “Speak to my lawyer.” After hearing that, he...

This all just happened, I haven’t seen Nadia yet, but I’m actually pretty shocked it came to this. We have been friendly for years, and are the only two black...

I thought I had a work buddy and a chill work place, but now I don’t even know what to think. Was what I said actually discriminatory?

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Should I talk to Nadia and see if we can resolve this? AITAH? Would really appreciate any advice on how I should move forward..

TLDR: Coworker tells me (gay) to go vacation in h__ophobic country, escalates to supervisor/HR when I tell her no.

This incident reveals a painful mismatch between cultural pride and lived safety concerns. Nadia’s repeated invitations and her “mother land” comment came from genuine affection for Nigeria, but they completely disregarded the well-documented risks LGBTQ+ travelers face there — where same-sex intimacy is punishable by up to 14 years in prison under federal law, and societal violence often goes unreported or unpunished.

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The man’s response was not discriminatory toward Nigeria or Nigerians. He made no generalizations about the country’s people, culture, or worth — he simply stated a personal safety boundary tied to his sexual orientation, a protected characteristic. Facts about criminalization and personal risk are not attacks on nationality.

Workplace harassment and DEI experts stress that raising legitimate concerns about safety linked to a protected class (here, sexual orientation) cannot reasonably be framed as discrimination against someone else’s nationality. Nadia’s complaint appears retaliatory: when her invitation was declined with a valid, personal reason, she escalated to HR instead of reflecting or apologizing.

Recommended next steps: Send a brief, factual follow-up email to HR and the supervisor recapping the conversation and outcome for documentation. Keep all future interactions with Nadia strictly professional and minimal. If any retaliation or further complaints occur, consult an employment attorney immediately. He is not obligated to repair a personal relationship with someone who turned a boundary into a workplace weapon.

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Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported him — almost everyone called him NTA and viewed his response as reasonable, factual, and necessary.

Most readers praised his calm explanation and strong handling of the supervisor, while criticizing Nadia’s reaction as disproportionate and retaliatory:

jrm1102 − NTA - you were being polite about her trips but she was pushing too far and you had no choice but to give an EXTREMELY valid reason for...

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QianLu − NTA. Honestly you probably want to head down to HR and make sure all this is documented.

GrouchyBear_99 − ***Do NOT sign the write up. *** … I would even file a counter-complaint based on "discriminatory actions regarding someone's private life". … NTA and I would step...

capricrnwh0re − NTA as a nigerian myself i get why you'd avoid going there, not only are lgbtq+ people targeted but also women. You have every right to decline for...

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KeyWeek − NTA. I’m half Nigerian … Your reason for not wanting to go is VERY valid. … The fact that she reported you for what you said (which was...

Many strongly advised protecting himself professionally and emotionally:

Stoic_STFU − … She exposed her homophobia with that telling remark about “s__ acts”. … Protect yourself and your peace. NTA

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cazzobomba − NTA but the silver lining is that you have a good reason to distance yourself from her. … Do you really need this person in your life?

AccomplishedDuck7816 − Talk to a lawyer now.

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A few comments highlighted the bigger picture of safety and personal boundaries:

franken_mouse − Facts aren't "discriminatory comments." What the everloving f__k. Obviously NTA, OP.

Viviaana − play the uno reverse card and say she discriminated against your sexuality, telling you to go to a h__ophobic country and just pretend you're not gay is super...

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You’re not the asshole. You were polite for years, then gave a calm, honest, and fact-based reason for declining a vacation that would put your safety at risk. Nadia’s decision to frame that as discrimination against her nationality and escalate it to HR says far more about her than it does about you. You handled the supervisor perfectly — refusing to sign anything and immediately invoking legal protection stopped the nonsense cold.

Document everything (email recap to HR), keep Nadia interactions strictly professional and minimal, and consider consulting an employment lawyer if anything else happens. You deserve a workplace where your identity isn’t turned into a weapon. What do you think — should he attempt one calm conversation with Nadia, or is complete distance the safer move? Let me know your thoughts below. 😊

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