Young man forced to post a photo of his passport on Facebook to prove his real name is 'Phuc Dat Bich'... after his account is banned THREE times

  • The 23-year-old Melbourne cleaner has vented his frustration on Facebook
  • The original post has gone viral with 125,000 likes and 67,000 shares
  • Commenters have supported Phuc and said he should embrace his name

The parents of a Vietnamese-Australian man may have had a lack of foresight when they named him ‘Phuc Dat Bich.’

The 23-year-old Melbourne cleaner uploaded a snap of his passport and vented his frustration on Facebook after the social media giant terminated his account three times on the grounds it was 'false and misleading.'

The post has amassed tens of thousands of shares and hilarious comments, with scores of social media users suggesting he should embrace the unique translation of his name.

The 23-year-old Melbourne man has taken to social media to prove his name is real after Facebook shut down his account three times

The 23-year-old Melbourne man has taken to social media to prove his name is real after Facebook shut down his account three times

‘I find it highly irritating the fact that nobody seems to believe me when I say that my full legal name is how you see it,’ the post reads.

‘I've been accused of using a false and misleading name of which I find very offensive. Is it because I'm Asian? Is it?’

‘Having my fb shut down multiple times and forced to change my name to my "real" name, so just to put it out there. My name.' 

‘Yours sincerely,’

‘Phuc Dat Bich’

The name, which is pronounced 'Phoop Dook Bic,' is reportedly a common in Vietnam, despite the spectacular response it has received in Australia.

The original post gone viral with tens of thousands of likes and hilarious comments on Facebook

The original post gone viral with tens of thousands of likes and hilarious comments on Facebook

The post has gone viral with tens of thousands of shares and hilarious comments, with many social media users suggesting he should embrace the unique translation of his name

The post has gone viral with tens of thousands of shares and hilarious comments, with many social media users suggesting he should embrace the unique translation of his name

Commenters on the original post were mostly supportive, with some suggesting he could avoid the complications by changing his name.

‘If u want u could change ur name bruh,' one user wrote.

But others suggested he stick to his guns and embrace the way his name sounds in Australia. 

‘Bless him in his native language it probably has a beautiful meaning but in our society the first thing we tend to think is oh that's offensive because all we seem to do is get offended by anything and everything ... well done for being brave,’ one user wrote.

Some users suggested he could avoid the complications by changing his name 

Some users suggested he could avoid the complications by changing his name 

But others suggested he stick to his guns and embrace the way his name sounds in Australia

But others suggested he stick to his guns and embrace the way his name sounds in Australia

Most of the comments were supportive, with people backing the 23-year-old Vietnamese-Australian man

Most of the comments were supportive, with people backing the 23-year-old Vietnamese-Australian man

The name, which is pronounced 'Phoop Dook Bic,' is reportedly a common in Vietnam, despite the spectacular response it has received in Australia

The name, which is pronounced 'Phoop Dook Bic,' is reportedly a common in Vietnam, despite the spectacular response it has received in Australia

The Melbourne cleaner received a lot of support from commenters on the viral post

The Melbourne cleaner received a lot of support from commenters on the viral post

Some commenters were sceptical of the passport's authenticity and suggested it may have been doctored

Some commenters were sceptical of the passport's authenticity and suggested it may have been doctored

‘Best name ever’ said another.

'Parents must have a great sense of humour,' said another.

'Mate ignore any disbelievers as they are only jealous of your name we think it's the best name man can have!' another said.

But some commenters were sceptical of the passport's authenticity and suggested it may have been doctored.

The original post has amassed 125,000 likes and 67,000 shares. 


 

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