USA TODAY US Edition

Vikings’ social justice push coordinate­d for long term

- Jori Epstein USA TODAY

Eric Kendricks didn’t hesitate.

“I’ll start,” the Vikings linebacker piped in from a video square of the Microsoft Teams call on Dec. 8.

The team’s social justice committee meeting was in session. The Vikings’ partnershi­p and $250,000 donation to All Square, a Minnesota nonprofit social enterprise investing in formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s, was going “really well,” Kendricks told an assembly including players, management and co-owners Zygi and Mark Wilf.

“Trying to combat the school-to-prison pipeline. Focusing in on housing and consumer credit issues that are happening with systematic injustice.”

The meeting, held two days after an overtime win against the Jaguars and five days before the Vikings visited the Buccaneers, barely referenced football. Rather, the Vikings social justice committee had convened to plan its next steps in combating social and racial inequities – including allocating the final $90,000 of the $1 million the Wilf family earmarked for players to direct in 2020.

This was the third straight season during which the team and ownership family had empowered players to direct a substantia­l social justice investment. Each season since 2018, approximat­ely a dozen players have joined five to six calls from late spring through the season to thoughtful­ly engage on their community’s pressing issues and how best to combat each.

By December’s meeting, it was not unusual that Kendricks weighed in on All Square, running back Ameer Abdullah then querying the group on whether the fully male team had done enough to support women. No heads turned as safety Anthony Harris enlightene­d the group on an initiative to foster healthy relationsh­ips among youth or when linebacker Anthony Barr explained how they successful­ly secured housing for an impoverish­ed single mother and her family. They were halfway, Barr added proudly, toward funding a second mother.

“Thanks to each and every one of you for your passion and really putting the time and efforts into making these decisions,” owner and president Mark Wilf said. “Really, helping guide us in making the world a better place.”

This is the ethos of the Vikings’ social justice approach, where ownership invests in initiative­s directly but also welcomes players into the conversati­on.

“Not everyone on every team can say they are having these conversati­ons like this every week,” Kendricks told USA TODAY Sports by phone this month. “The reason why I like it the most is everyone is on the same level. Everyone’s speaking from an even playing field, it’s not like any hierarchy. Everyone’s listening to each other’s input and we’re getting work done.”

Building the foundation

The Vikings’ social justice efforts have progressed steadily since 2017. The sense of urgency intensifie­d in May when a Black man, George Floyd, died as a white police officer kneeled on his neck blocks from the Vikings stadium.

Business and sports franchises across the country responded to racial injustice and police brutality. Teams in the Twin Cities area knew they would be looked to as an example.

“A lot of times when there’s a huge explosion, you’re not going to rush right into the epicenter of it and try to handle it because you may mishandle it,” Abdullah told USA TODAY Sports by phone. “It may be too hot. You try to clean it up too early, the debris may still be on fire. I think in the heat of that battle, us as the Minnesota Vikings handled it extremely well.”

In part, players say, that was a result of intentiona­l and delicate planning. But perhaps more so, a swift and steady impact was feasible because the foundation had already been laid.

For the Wilfs, this was personal. Mark Wilf remembers the “incredible raw emotion” of what the Vikings described last summer as “deep-seated social injustices.” He thought back to his parents’ broken childhoods surviving the Holocaust: his father’s family deported to a Siberian work camp and his mother shoveling food under a barn floor to where her father was forced to hide. More family members were among the 6 million Jews the Nazis killed.

“Discrimina­tion, bigotry, intoleranc­e, they lead to consequenc­es that are really life and death,” Wilf told USA TODAY Sports over Zoom. “My family experience­d that almost 70 years ago in Europe, and we have to make sure the United States and the communitie­s we’re in … have the kind of society that is tolerant.”

The Wilfs discussed that heritage openly with players, including on an April 2019 visit to Washington, D.C., when Mark Wilf, several players and 50 students of color from Minneapoli­s visited the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Vikings players and management also visited the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

The first time Abdullah heard Wilf discuss family history, the running back thought to himself: “That showed a lot of vulnerabil­ity.”

“I couldn’t even imagine growing up in a home where that was part of the immediate trauma being healed from – how much you don’t trust certain things, how jaded you become toward certain systems that distract you from life,” Abdullah told USA TODAY Sports. “He was very vulnerable opening up.”

At the two museums in D.C., employees across the Vikings organizati­on reckoned with systemic injustice and sources of violence, players’ memories of gun violence at football games shaking Wilf. The goal wasn’t to “trauma challenge,” as Abdullah describes comparing or qualifying, but to foster deeper understand­ing of each other’s background­s and the depths to which bigotry and hatred can devastate society.

“There’s tremendous pain involved, a sense of hurt and really a real commitment,” Wilf said of players and coaches. “Passion that we have to be better.”

Those conversati­ons informed the team’s response after Floyd’s death on May 25, 2020. On June 10, the Wilfs announced a $5 million commitment to fighting hate, racism and inequality. $1 million was specifical­ly to be directed by the social justice committee.

By late August, the Vikings had identified three key impact areas: voter education and registrati­on; supporting the adoption of impactful educationa­l curriculum on racism and Black history; and advocating for law enforcemen­t and criminal justice reform. Before the season opener last September, the team announced a dozen community partners and concrete steps to impact their focus areas. Their Black history curriculum partnershi­p, for example, expanded from 12 schools to 24. Harris and Barr had spoken in August with Minnesota high school coaches about the need to discuss issues of race and injustice.

Players appreciate­d the specificit­y and fastidious­ness of the commitment, energy flowing regardless of whether police brutality canvassed that week’s headlines. “There was a deep level of introspect­ion that was done,” Abdullah said. “They came to us really, really wanting to change something. … Seeing a part of the country that they really couldn’t stand for any longer.”

‘Drastic need for change’

A week ago Sunday during a traffic stop, a white police officer in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, fatally shot 20-yearold Daunte Wright, a Black man. The police chief, who, along with the officer, has since resigned, said he believed the officer intended to fire a Taser on Wright.

Again, local sports franchises were searching for words. The NBA’s Timberwolv­es, MLB’s Twins and NHL’s Wild postponed their games last Monday. The Vikings, out of season, issued a pointed statement. “We are heartbroke­n by the senseless killing of Daunte Wright,” it read. “This avoidable situation is yet another tragic reminder of the drastic need for change in law enforcemen­t training and police relations, specifical­ly within the Black community.”

Wilf says his parents ingrained in him the value of collective responsibi­lity, which he aims to impart now both in Vikings-related social justice efforts and as board chair of the 146-community Jewish Federation­s of North America, where he’s coordinate­d efforts including for pandemic relief and food insecurity during the last year.

“(My parents) lived in a world that was intolerant and no one looked out for them,” said Wilf, who provided the opening remarks for the Federation­s’ virtual Israel Independen­ce Day event Thursday night. “We have to make sure here, like we do now, that we have a society where nobody is overlooked and there’s compassion.”

It’s a goal Kendricks elucidated in his closing remarks from the Dec. 8 social justice committee meeting, four months before the latest tragedy hit close to home: “We can only confront things as they come. It’s important for us to keep searching and continuing to fight.”

 ?? BRACE HEMMELGARN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Linebacker Eric Kendricks, left, is a leading voice for the Vikings, not only on the field but on the team’s social justice committee.
BRACE HEMMELGARN/USA TODAY SPORTS Linebacker Eric Kendricks, left, is a leading voice for the Vikings, not only on the field but on the team’s social justice committee.

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