Houston Chronicle

Rockets’ Brown visits the pope

Recent signee among the five NBA players who discussed social justice at the Vatican

- By Jonathan Abrams

A delegation of five NBA players, including recent Rockets signee Sterling Brown, and officials from the players associatio­n met privately with Pope Francis on Monday at the Vatican to discuss their efforts toward addressing social justice and economic inequality.

The visit came after the Vatican extended an invitation to the players’ union, saying the pope wanted to learn more about their activities. Michele Roberts, the executive director of the National Basketball Players Associatio­n, joined Kyle Korver, Brown, Anthony Tolliver, Marco Belinelli and Jonathan Isaac, players who are all active in the union, at the meeting.

“I thought it was a fraud email that I got,” Korver said. “I called Michele right away. I was like, ‘Is this for real?’ She said, ‘Yes, it is and would you like to come in like two days?’ This came together really quick.”

After the 30-minute meeting, the players and officials still appeared stunned as they talked about it on video calls with reporters. “I’m still not even sure if this really happened,” Roberts said. The players took turns addressing the pope and offered him a book documentin­g many of their community and social initiative­s in the last few months as well as jerseys and a Black

Lives Matter T-shirt.

“He said sport is such an opportunit­y to unify, and he compared it to a team where you have a common goal and you’re working together, but you all use your own personalit­ies,” Korver said.

For the players, the meeting provided an opportunit­y to expand global awareness of the efforts to promote social justice after the deaths of several Black Americans at the hands of the police, including George Floyd in Minnesota, and the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Wisconsin.

Brown and Korver were members of the Milwaukee Bucks team that initiated a work stoppage throughout sports in August. Confined inside the NBA’s bubble environmen­t in Orlando, Fla., the Bucks players refused to take part in a scheduled playoff game after the shooting of Blake in Kenosha, Wisc. Their protest quickly spread to other teams and other sports, forcing the postponeme­nt of games in the WNBA, Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer.

In June, Francis said he had watched the social unrest enveloping the United States with “great concern.”

In his October encyclical, titled “Brothers All,” a reflection on fraternity and social friendship, the pope wrote that “a readiness to discard others finds expression in vicious attitudes that we thought long past, such as racism, which retreats undergroun­d only to keep reemerging. Instances of racism continue to shame us, for they show that our supposed social progress is not as real or definitive as we think.”

He added, “Racism is a virus that quickly mutates and, instead of disappeari­ng, goes into hiding, and lurks in waiting.”

Brown recently settled a civil rights lawsuit against the city of Milwaukee and its police department for $750,000, citing police brutality during a 2018 incident over a parking violation.

The agreement included an admission of a constituti­onal violation by the city and commitment to procedural changes by the police department.

Brown said he wished the meeting with Francis had lasted longer. He spoke about the Bucks’ protest and Blake’s shooting more than his personal experience with police brutality.

“Nobody gets to do this from where I’m from, barely get to do it from the United States,” Brown said. “For me to be one of them, I can definitely take this and hold this and let people know I’m out here doing this to make a change, to actually get things put on other people’s minds that have influence, to a degree.”

Belinelli, amember of the San Antonio Spurs, was the only player able to speak in Italian to the pope.

More players had expressed interest in making the trip but could not because of the complicati­ons of travel in the pandemic and the holiday week. Free agency also is continuing. Training camps begin next week. “If we had more time, I would have 50 guys,” Roberts said.

The players who attended described the decision to meet the pope as an easy one. “You say ‘pope’ and being able to fly to Rome, this is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, so why not take it?” said Isaac, who paused his rehabilita­tion froma torn ACL to take part, while Brown agreed to his deal with the Rockets only a few hours before departing.

“This visit is the kind of thing that gives you, I believe, the sense of confirmati­on that the work that you’re doing is making a difference,” Roberts said. “The confirmati­on comes from someone whose life is spent giving of himself to others, saying what you’re doing is exactly what you should be doing, and I encourage you to keep doing it.”

Tolliver described Francis as “super chill.”

“Hewas actually way more relaxed than I’d ever imagine a pope being,” he said, adding that he did some reading on Francis before the trip. He said the pope told the players about how he used to love watching the Harlem Globetrott­ers and even flashed a sense of humor.

“And you know, when the pope makes a halfway joke, it’s the funniest thing ever, right?” Tolliver said. “So when I say making jokes, anything that was supposed to be remotely funny, we made sure we gave him a good laugh.”

 ?? Getty Images ?? Pope Francis, left, meets with five NBA players. He discussed the ability of sports to unify and commended the players’ efforts.
Getty Images Pope Francis, left, meets with five NBA players. He discussed the ability of sports to unify and commended the players’ efforts.

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