Field Visit: On the Road With NBA Stars in Kenya

From the photos that accompany this blog post, you’ll see that I’ve been traveling with a group of really tall men. Last week, NBA greats Dikembe Mutombo, Luc Mbah a Moute, and Nick Collison were on the road with the U.S. Fund for UNICEF on a field visit to UNICEF projects in northern Kenya. They visited refugee camps at Kakuma, medical facilities in Makutano, and children’s shelters in Lodwar. But what I’ve learned about these men is that it isn’t their extraordinary height that makes them remarkable, or the fact that each can palm an infant as easily as they can palm a basketball—it’s their super-sized hearts.

From the photos that accompany this blog post, you’ll see that I’ve been traveling with a group of really tall men. Last week, NBA greats Dikembe Mutombo, Luc Mbah a Moute and Nick Collison were on the road with the U.S. Fund for UNICEF on a field visit to UNICEF projects in northern Kenya. They visited refugee camps at Kakuma, medical facilities in Makutano, and children’s shelters in Lodwar.

Luc Mbah a Moute in a classroom in Kenya. © UNICEF/2012/Torfinn

But what I’ve learned about these men is that it isn’t their extraordinary height that makes them remarkable, or the fact that each can palm an infant as easily as they can palm a basketball—it’s their super-sized hearts.  These guys could have been anywhere, but they chose to take time away from their families and friends to travel with us to help some of the world’s least visible children. They gave polio vaccines to the children of Turkana tribesmen who without UNICEF might never see a health facility. They spoke gently, and with enormous compassion, to little girls who’ve been rescued from abuse and arranged marriages, and who now live in a UNICEF-supported boarding school.

Nick Collison giving a lift in Kenya. © UNICEF/2012/Torfinn

And they played basketball. Oh, the squeals of glee and beaming faces of the children who rocketed around the players’ knees as they taught them to dribble and shoot. It was something to behold. Sport, of course, isn’t just about sports, our friend Dikembe (a longtime NBA Global Ambassador and USF Southwest Regional Board member) often says— “In a refugee camp like Kakuma, a basketball court brings people in the community together in a place where UNICEF can deliver lifesaving support. Sports can attract children to a school, so they have an opportunity to learn and escape the cruel cycle of poverty.”

Dikembe Mutombo in Kenya

Dikembe Mutombo in Kenya. © UNICEF/2012/Torfinn

Dikembe, Luc and Nick are part of a U.S. Fund for UNICEF partnership with the National Basketball Association that is bringing real change to children in places like those we visited this week. Like us, the NBA believes that every child has the right to live, learn and play. Like us, the NBA believes that ZERO children should be denied vaccinations, and education, and the opportunities to make a better life. Now back in the United States, these three guys are all determined to help spread the word. You’ll be hearing much more on this trip from all of us over the next few weeks, and we hope that you, too, will be inspired to make a difference in the lives of the world’s children. I hope you'll follow us on Twitter and "Like" us on Facebook for more updates.