The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
Abdul-Jabbar reflects on becoming himself
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has been a best-selling author, civil-rights activist, actor, historian and one of the greatest basketball players who ever lived.
This fall, Abdul-Jabbar will embark on a cross-country tour as part of “Becoming Kareem,” a stage show in which he’ll discuss his life, answer audience questions and talk about the key mentors he says helped him achieve his goals. Among them: civil rights heroes Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, his legendary college coach and lifelong friend John Wooden, and fellow superstar athletes Muhammad Ali and Wilt Chamberlain.
The tour was inspired by the 2017 best-seller “Becoming Kareem,” a memoir of his years from childhood to age 24. Inspirational, poignant, funny and occasionally heartbreaking, it recounts the coming of age of a bright and hardworking, but painfully introverted kid, one who was always the tallest in class.
And although he didn’t realize it until looking closely at a class photo taken in the third grade, he was often the only black kid in class, a circumstance that in later years would expose him to repeated episodes of ugly racism, no matter his fame or success, that would leave deep emotional scars that sometimes took decades to heal.
So he kept his game face on, both on and off the court, and persevered through setbacks and successes.
“I did the book because I thought that the process that I went through could be very useful for young people right now,” Abdul-Jabbar said this week at the offices of the Skyhook Foundation, the charitable nonprofit he created several years ago to provide educational opportunities for elementary school children, the same group he targeted his book for.
After its publication, sports broadcaster Roy Firestone, a longtime friend, suggested he share those experiences directly with live audiences, telling him his words would not only resonate with young people today, but provide a chance for Abdul-Jabbar to clear up some lingering misconceptions dating to his playing days. The clipped, seemingly curt answers he often gave during post-game interviews, for example, frequently came across not as shy but as surly, especially coming from someone who stood an intimidatingly tall 7 feet, 2 inches.
“And that was very unfortunate,” Abdul-Jabbar says softly now. “I think it kept me from a head coaching job and commercials and stuff because people wanted to assume the worst.”
Not that he hasn’t had a storied life and career before and after basketball.
Abdul-Jabbar played on six NBA championship teams, was an assistant coach for two others, won a record six MVP awards and is the leading scorer in NBA history with 38,387 points, a mark that’s never been seriously challenged in the 29 years since he retired.
He’s written more than a dozen books ranging from children’s adventure novels to histories of prominent African-Americans to crime novels.
“That and this tour will hopefully keep me pretty busy,” he said.