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'View' host Sunny Hostin stunned to learn her ancestor was a slaveholder: 'That's disappointing'

"The View" host Sunny Hostin was surprised to discover her family had ties to colonial Spain and the slave trade on the documentary show "Finding Your Roots."

"The View" host Sunny Hostin was shocked to discover her family's hidden history in a new episode of the PBS documentary show "Finding Your Roots."

The documentary show researches prominent figures' family histories through historical records and DNA testing. On Tuesday's episode, show host Henry Louis Gates Jr. revealed one of Hostin's ancestors on her maternal side was likely involved in the slave trade in colonial Spain. 

Her third great-grandfather also "owned at least one human being," he said.

Hostin, whose mother is Puerto Rican and father is Black, confessed the revelation left her "in shock."

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"Wow, I’m a little bit in shock. I just always thought of myself as half Puerto Rican. I didn’t think my family was originally from Spain and slaveholders," she said.

Hostin shared that her husband Manny's family is also from Spain, so they have that in common.

"I think it’s actually pretty interesting that my husband and I have shared roots, so I do appreciate that, and I think it’s great for our children to know this information. I guess it’s a fact of life that this is how some people made their living, on the backs of others," she continued. 

Hostin's family tree and own DNA revealed even deeper ties to Spain, which further surprised her.

"I had no idea the Spanish roots to this extent. I'm still sorta shocked at the depth of the ties," she said.

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Gates teased Hostin that her White side of her family had to have "come from somewhere," before jokingly asking her what she had against Spain.

"Just the colonization of other people," Hostin responded with a chuckle before growing more somber. "I’m surprised that they were enslavers, actually. That’s disappointing."

Hostin went on to say that her mother "certainly identifies as Puerto Rican and non-White, actually." 

"So I hate this for her," she said with a laugh.

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Earlier in the show, Hostin explained how her mother was very politically active and often took her to protests as a child, which shaped Hostin's concerns about social justice.

The "View" host received happier news later in the show. Gates presented her with her third great-grandfather's Georgia voter registration card from 1867. The show host said Hostin's ancestor was likely born into slavery in 1835.

"Wow, that's cool," she said, admitting the news touched her. Wiping back tears, she remarked happily, "That's amazing. In 1867 to register to vote… that's amazing."

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