First, they left home just as they
became teenagers for Dakar, the nation's capital, to attend an academy
that would prepare them for the next step —the chance to go to the
United States and, through basketball, have a chance at a quality
education.
While young men from Africa have been coming to the
United States in growing numbers, the idea that reaching the NBA is
their only goal is off, way off.
Through a program called SEEDS — Sports for Education and Economic Development in Senegal — education comes before basketball.
“It was a tough decision to leave home but as I was leaving my dad said he didn't
care about basketball. He wanted me to study,” said Louisville center
Gorgui Dieng, a preseason All-Big East selection.
“SEEDS is a great
program, a chance to go to school and maybe play college basketball. If
four or five of us do well then that will let others know what we have
done. ... We want to go home with the education we earned here and make
sure others have the same chance. Maybe one day I will work for our
government.''
SEEDS is not affiliated with the Senegalese
government. It is a nonprofit foundation started in 2002 by Amadou Gallo
Fall, a native of Senegal who came to the United States and was able to
work in basketball, eventually landing a position with the Dallas
Mavericks.
He was able to form the strategic plan for SEEDS, one that
for the first decade has worked well while leaving plenty of opportunity
for growth as the NBA continues to expand internationally.
Since
Aziz N'Diaye became the first SEEDS graduate to play at an American
college — the University of Washington — the Senegalese students have
kept coming.
Baye Moussa Keita was a 6-foot-6, 14-year-old soccer
player growing up in Senegal. The coach of his youth team encouraged him
to attend a small clinic so officials from the organization could see
him.
A year later Keita left his parents and six siblings to attend
the SEEDS Academy. It turned out to be a great move. After graduating
from the academy, Keita headed for the United States and eventually a
basketball scholarship at Syracuse.
Keita, who grew up speaking
French and Wolof, the native language of Senegal, said it took a few
months at Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Va., to feel comfortable
with English.
“Everything was just different but that really helped me,” he said. “I feel like I've assimilated well.”
That is all part of what SEEDS does. Anne
Buford directed a documentary about SEEDS called Elevate. The film
stays with four young men as they go through the SEEDS program at home
and then their arrival at different schools in the United States. It's
powerful as the film shows how much this chance means to those chosen.
It is about an opportunity of a lifetime.
“Americans tend to view
Africa through a distorted lens,” Buford said. “When we think of Africa
we think jungle, poverty, guns — a floundering continent.
But I had on
my hands a real story about men helping other men, about hope and
opportunity, not pity. Through basketball, these kids were learning life
skills and earning their ticket to an education.”
Youssoupha Ndoye is a sophomore at Saint Bona- venture. “SEEDS
was a learning experience. I can say everything I've learned
basketball-wise and social-wise was because of SEEDS,” he said.
“There
was probably like 22 people in the dorms, all males, and we all played
basketball. We'd go to the same school together, we'd have the bus come
pick us up, go to school, come back and practice. It was so serious.
They take basketball serious but education first, then basketball.
“Their
goal was for us, once we come here, to not be surprised. To not have
culture shock as bad as if you didn't learn anything there, basically to
follow the rules like you'd have here. We was all like a family, the
people that went there. I found my best friend there — we still talk
every day — so it was really a good experience.”