Los Angeles Times

A GLOBAL EFFORT

NBA’s internatio­nal players, including from Germany, are playing a role in league’s endeavor to confront racism in the United States

- By Tania Ganguli

The city of Brunswick in Germany, Braunschwe­ig as the locals call it, hearkens to a medieval past as well as a modern future. It is a city that helped aid the rise of Adolf Hitler, and one that was nearly destroyed by the time World War II ended.

Today, Braunschwe­ig is a modern, diverse city that attracts young people. It’s where Oklahoma City Thunder guard Dennis Schroder grew up.

His childhood there wasn’t perfect. As a Black kid growing up in the predominan­tly white nation, whose father grew up in Germany and mother emigrated from Gambia, he experience­d racism. When he moved to the United States, he wasn’t surprised to see racism here. But it felt different.

“It was kind of like a culture shock,” Schroder said.

He wasn’t accustomed to the care that Black men had to take around police officers, or even walking down the street. The concept of gun violence was foreign to him, as was the idea that he was safe because he played in the NBA, but others with his skin color weren’t.

When he thinks about his future and that of his young children, Schroder would rather they grew up in Braunschwe­ig.

“It’s just safe. I know everybody,” Schroder said. “I can say nothing is gonna happen to me there. I don’t have to worry about anything.”

In Schroder’s personal history, several concepts about American race relations meld together. Braunschwe­ig, like other parts of Germany, has confronted its ugly past — Schroder started learning about it as a preteen.

Scholars, activists and politician­s lately have considered the difference­s in the ways that Germany confronted its actions during the Holocaust with the way America confronted its past of slavery, the Jim Crow era and racist policies that followed. Many people see the difference as obvious: America doesn’t honestly talk enough about its past.

“You go to Germany, and there’s markers everywhere where Holocaust victims were,” former Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “They’ve come to grips with what they did. They’ve paid reparation­s in Germany. They still are. We’ve yet to come to grips.”

For the last several months, the NBA has tried to be part of a move toward change.

With the death in late May of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapoli­s who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes, came nationwide protests and reckonings. Before the season resumed in the bubble,

the NBA considered how it could help steer the conversati­on.

In the bubble on the Disney World campus near Orlando, Fla., players and coaches speak about examples of racism, sometimes from their own experience­s.

“The more talented and aff luent and elite you are, the more tempting it is to simply do the comfortabl­e and convenient,” said Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit organizati­on committed to ending mass incarcerat­ion and excessive punishment in the United States. “Which is why I am impressed by what the league has done and what the players and coaches have done.

“They know that some fans are not going to be happy, may never forgive them for speaking about these issues, and they’ve done it anyway.”

Stevenson often talks about the difference­s in how Germany and America ref lect on their pasts. He sees South Africa’s post- apartheid actions, forming a truth and reconcilia­tion commission, as a model. In Rwanda, tourists can visit a stark, unvarnishe­d museum about the country’s 1994 genocide.

Once World War II ended in Germany, the country didn’t immediatel­y look inward. Rather, in many ways it avoided the subject. Not until the late 20th century did Germany truly start to educate its citizens about the Holocaust, a process that intensifie­d after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989.

By contrast, about 30 years after the American Civil War ended, Southern states began erecting monuments honoring Confederat­e leaders.

German cities include memorials to Holocaust victims and survivors, to families who were abducted during the war. German children learn about their own towns’ histories, as Schroder did.

“There was a sense of responsibi­lity,” said Washington Wizards forward- center Moe Wagner, who was born in Berlin in 1997. “We learned a lot about it and heard about it. I hated history because we had it all the time. I wasn’t a fan, but you kind of develop a sense of responsibi­lity for your country.”

The country’s education on the Holocaust has its critics who believe it doesn’t go far enough. And despite its efforts, Germany has not been immune to the neofascism that has spread to parts of Europe and the United States. But the movements are illegal in Germany, as is honoring Nazis in any way.

“No kid is born with hate or racism — it’s taught,” said Daniel Theis, a Boston Celtics center who grew up near Braunschwe­ig. He remembers learning about the Holocaust in elementary school. “In Germany, in school you learn about the history early. You learn what happened, and you can look forward so it’s something that’s never going to happen again.”

Dallas Mavericks forward Maxi Kleber, who was born in Wurzburg, Germany, in 1992, remembers visiting the memorial to the concentrat­ion camp in Dachau as a teenager.

When NBA players decided to wear social justice messages on the back of their jersey, Kleber wore “gleichbere­chtigung” on the back of his — German for equality. The Mavericks chose in unison to wear “equality” on their jerseys with f ive languages represente­d — English, German, Spanish, Latvian and Slovenian.

The National Basketball Coaches Assn. began a partnershi­p with the Equal Justice Initiative this summer. When Stevenson began working with the coaches, he stressed the importance of education. He provided them with calendars that list a different sordid anniversar­y of racial injustice in America every day of the year.

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle didn’t take questions before he started his pregame news conference before Game 1 of his team’s f irst- round series against the Clippers.

“Aug. 17, 1965, riots in the Watts neighborho­od of Los

Angeles, California, sparked by white police beating a young Black man leave 34 dead, 1,032 injured, nearly 4,000 arrested and nearly $ 40 million in damage,” he said.

San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich, in response to a question about whether forward Marco Belinelli would be active, discussed a North Carolina law that was passed 120 years ago designed to prevent Black people from voting.

“The great evil of American slavery wasn’t involuntar­y slavery and forced labor,” Stevenson said. “It was this terrible idea that Black people are less deserving, less human, less evolved, less worthy, less credible. And that manifests itself every day in the streets of America.”

More than 10 million people were brought from Africa to the Americas in the slave trade, with an additional 2 million dying during the passage. Although only a fraction of those 10 million came directly to North America, by the 1800s there were about 4 million American slaves.

“When the slaves were emancipate­d, the ideology of white supremacy was never addressed,” Denver Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “‘ OK, I can free you, but that’s just on paper. That’s not in our ideology as a country. You are still lesser than us. You are still unequal to us as white people.’

“… We as a country have never taken away the ideology of Black people are lesser than white people. How do we go about that? After 400 years, how do we go about addressing that and changing that?”

Stevenson sees education as a critical element to addressing that mentality.

“We sang Dixie songs in high school, in grade school, and we almost celebrated slavery like it was a cool thing,” said Rivers, who grew up in Illinois. “You know, think about it, Black kids singing songs about picking cotton and how absurd that is. When I was a kid, I didn’t think anything of it. Thought it was a cool song. And then we grow up, you’re like, ‘ What the hell was that?’ ”

Kleber, who came to America in 2017, stressed that racism is a global problem. He has also learned a lot about the experience of Black people in America during the last few months through video and phone calls with teammates.

“For me, it was very eyeopening,” Kleber said.

Those conversati­ons are not exclusive to the Mavericks, and they have changed the way some internatio­nal players understand America.

“When I was looking in from outside without ever being in the U. S., watching all the stuff in media, TV, movies, everything, it seems like a perfect place,” said Clippers center Ivica Zubac, who grew up in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a. “It took me to get here and get to know my teammates better to realize what they went through growing up.”

It’s also changed how players from other countries look at their own societies.

“Germany has racism too,” Wagner said. “I have so many Black friends, they always get asked ‘ where are you from,’ or people start speaking English to them, that’s, like, racist. I never realized it, but the last couple months made me realize it and be more aware, for sure.”

Many Black Europeans quickly learn what it means to be Black in America when they arrive in the United States.

“My culture, obviously, there’s a lot of people that might have felt racism … but I was never scared for my life,” said Milwaukee Bucks star forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, who was born and raised in Greece, the son of Nigerian immigrants.

“[ In the United States], people are scared to walk in the street because of the color of skin. You’re scared for your life. Things have to change. I just became a dad a few months ago … I had the conversati­on with my girlfriend. It’s scary. It’s scary to raise a son here.”

Antetokoun­mpo recalled a lesson from his rookie year. Teammate Caron Butler told him to remove his hooded sweatshirt at night. Antetokoun­mpo didn’t understand why, but he does now. It was a safety measure lest someone assume he’s dangerous.

“Here, you really gotta be careful what you say because you don’t know how the policeman or whoever you’re in that situation with, how he thinks,” Schroder said. “That’s perfect words what Giannis said. In Germany, whenever you get pulled over, you ain’t gotta be worried about anything. Of course, they’re going to check you or whatever, but that’s everywhere.

“Here, when you get pulled over, you gotta be really smart with your words [ so] that nothing happens to you.”

During Denver’s playoff run, Malone often wore a shirt that said “Justice for Elijah McClain,” referencin­g a mild- mannered 23- yearold who died in August 2019 in Aurora, Colo., after being aggressive­ly restrained by police and injected with a sedative. Police were called because someone reported McClain looking “sketchy.”

“Being Black isn’t suspicious,” Malone said.

Said Stevenson: “I’m a middle- aged Black man. I’ve got a law degree from Harvard Law School, got a bunch of other degrees … and I still go places where I’m presumed dangerous and guilty, where it is my burden to make sure that I assure a law enforcemen­t off icer or a store owner that I’m not a threat.

“… The fact that most people didn’t participat­e in a mob lynching, didn’t participat­e in enslavemen­t, didn’t pass the laws that codified racial segregatio­n, doesn’t mean that they don’t have an obligation to address all of the adverse consequenc­es that f low from that history.”

‘[ In the United States], you really gotta be careful what you say because you don’t know how the policeman ... thinks.’

— DENNIS SCHRODER, Thunder guard ‘[ The NBA knows] that some fans ... may never forgive them for speaking about these issues, and they’ve done it anyway.’

— BRYAN STEVENSON, executive director of a human rights organizati­on ‘ I hated history because we had it all the time. ... But you kind of develop a sense of responsibi­lity for your country.’

— MOE WAGNER, Wizards forward- center

Since players arrived in Orlando, the question has persisted — what can the NBA actually do to fight racism and injustice?

One answer was to use their interview sessions to force people to listen. Players would begin news conference­s with discussion­s of racial injustice; some would refuse to discuss anything else. More than once, players felt overwhelme­d in postgame, on- the- court interviews.

Denver guard Jamal Murray fell into a squat on the court, emotionall­y exhausted, before discussing racism. Lakers star LeBron James spoke passionate­ly about fear of police in the Black community and has shared his worry for his children.

The Bucks staged a walkout Aug. 26 that the rest of the league joined, after their emotions boiled over following the release of a video showing police repeatedly shooting Jacob Blake, an unarmed Black man, in the back in a town only 40 miles from the Bucks’ home arena. The Bucks were led, in part, by guard Sterling Brown, who was physically attacked by police in Milwaukee for parking illegally in a January 2018 incident that was captured on video.

They’re just conversati­ons, and they won’t change everything by themselves.

Even those conversati­ons, Stevenson says, will begin to help.

“The league is doing an amazing job f ighting for it,” Schroder said. “We just gotta keep pushing, and maybe one day you can raise a family in the States and don’t have to be worried what happens to my daughter or my son.”

 ?? Michael Probst Associated Press ?? I N THIS 2008 photo, Jewish genealogy researcher Gary Mokotoff of the United States checks name registers at a Holocaust center in Bad Arolsen, Germany. Germany has made greater efforts in recent decades to educate its citizens on the horrors of that genocide.
Michael Probst Associated Press I N THIS 2008 photo, Jewish genealogy researcher Gary Mokotoff of the United States checks name registers at a Holocaust center in Bad Arolsen, Germany. Germany has made greater efforts in recent decades to educate its citizens on the horrors of that genocide.
 ?? Mike Ehrmann Getty I mages ?? THE THUNDER’S Dennis Schroder, who’s from Germany, said race relations in the U. S. came as a “culture shock.”
Mike Ehrmann Getty I mages THE THUNDER’S Dennis Schroder, who’s from Germany, said race relations in the U. S. came as a “culture shock.”
 ?? Michael Dwyer Associated Press ?? OKLAHOMA CITY’S Dennis Schroder grew up in Germany, which has made strides in confrontin­g its past.
Michael Dwyer Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY’S Dennis Schroder grew up in Germany, which has made strides in confrontin­g its past.
 ?? Ashley Landis Associated Press ?? WASHINGTON’S Moe Wagner ( 21) said he “learned a lot about [ the Holocaust]” via his German schooling.
Ashley Landis Associated Press WASHINGTON’S Moe Wagner ( 21) said he “learned a lot about [ the Holocaust]” via his German schooling.
 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? BRYAN STEVENSON, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, is lauding the NBA’s battle against racism.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press BRYAN STEVENSON, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, is lauding the NBA’s battle against racism.

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