Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

NBA legend Abdul-Jabbar says Africa needs to embrace innovation

- STUART HESS

JOHANNESBU­RG: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar isn’t celebrated nearly as much globally as the late Muhammad Ali – certainly not outside of the United States – but he should be.

Abdul-Jabbar, pictured, is nowhere as rambunctio­us as Ali, a close friend, once was – not many were or are – but that should in no way minimise the crucial role he has played in the fight for injustice for society’s downtrodde­n.

The 71-year-old still had a large national footprint in the US, mainly as a result of his exploits in college basketball – which back in the 1960s was more popular than the profession­al game. He won three consecutiv­e national titles with the UCLA team from 1967 to 1969. When he turned profession­al he went on to win six NBA titles, five with the LA Lakers.

Abdul- Jabbar scored the highest number of points in NBA history and has played the most number of games by any player and if he had done nothing thereafter, he’d still rank as one of the greatest athletes ever. However he has always carried out his work off the court quietly.

Perhaps that’s why his presence in the country last week as a guest of the NBA, ahead of the Africa Game, caused barely a ripple. Had it been the late Ali ... But Abdul-Jabbar is a giant of sport not just in terms of his physique, or the numbers he put in as a 20-year profession­al in the NBA but the stance he, like Ali, took in highlighti­ng social injustice in the United States. His most public step was withdrawin­g from the US men’s basketball team for the 1968 Olympics due to the unequal treatment of black Americans.

Like Ali he too undertook a journey to Africa in the 1970s – to Senegal where the first attempts at creating what is now known as Basketball Without Border, a global develop- ment programme,were made.

More than 40 years later, Abdul- Jabbar was back on the continent, at a time when the NBA’s brand is as big as ever, while some of its most high profile stars – who thanks mainly to social media are now global entities in a way Abdul-Jabbar never was at the height of his playing career –are following in his footsteps as far as highlighti­ng social issues is concerned.

“Basketball has given people who would not ordinarily have gotten the chance, the opportunit­y to gain some wealth and use it to affect change. It’s happened in my life, look at what LeBron James is doing now, he’s just built a school – awesome. This is how it happens, people get consciousn­ess and then they get the resources and they effect change.” It’s the kind of change that Abdul-Jabbar’s heroes struggled for, and while that change may seem miniscule, particular­ly at a time when the world seems very divided, the fact change is happening at all is what should be encouragin­g.

“Some people don’t want to struggle. Nelson Mandela wasn’t like that. That determinat­ion and understand­ing of what lay on the other side of the struggle enabled Madiba to endure and lead his people to where they wanted to go.

“There is a struggle ahead, it will be hard but we know our kids will benefit, and so it was worth the struggle.”

Besides lending his face to the NBA Africa Game last week, much of Abdul-Jabbar’s stay was taken up highlighti­ng how Africa needed to increase its presence on the global stage through innovation. “It’s important not to get caught up in the thought that innovation is an end in itself; it’s not,” he said at a summit at the Nelson Mandela Foundation.

“A lot of people don’t accept innovation; they don’t want to see women in the workplace, they don’t want to take orders from women and listen to them ... we have to overcome these stereotypi­cal and very backward assumption­s that we have made and accepted just because humanity has accepted them over the years.

“That is part of the innovation­s that we have to promote.”

 ??  ?? KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR
KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR

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