Photo and story courtesy CNN Inside Africa
From Adeline Chen and Errol Barnett, CNN
It’s hard not to notice Aziz N’Diaye. Standing at seven feet tall,
the starting center for the University of Washington’s basketball team
is a dominant force in American college basketball.
His towering height and physical power, coupled with his impressive
shot-blocking and rebounding skills, make the senior a serious prospect
for a professional basketball career. But the imposing center’s past is
just as compelling as his promising future.
N’Diaye’s long journey to college basketball started several years ago on the other side of the Atlantic.
“I’m originally from Dakar, which is the capital of Senegal,”
explains N’Diaye, whose introspective tone contrasts with his imposing
stature. “I was going to a smaller high school over there … for two
years and I got offered to come to the States to finish my high-school
career.”
The place that jump-started N’Diaye’s dream of playing in the NBA was
the Sports for Education and Economic Development in Senegal (SEEDS)
academy, a boarding school that gives eager young men from the West
African country the opportunity to study and play basketball, with the
possibility of being recruited to play on a bigger stage in the United
States.
Located in Thies, western Senegal, SEEDS uses sports as a vehicle to
empower and support youth in the country while offering them quality
education and helping them to improve their athletic skills. The academy
provides up to 30 youngsters a year with a place to live, study and
train, sheltering their dreams for a better future in a country where
less than 20% of children make it to high school.
“As Africans, we have a responsibility to build our community,” says
Amadou Gallo Fall, who started the SEEDS foundation in 1998, before
opening the boarding school in 2003. “Those days are over where other
people came, saw tremendous potential and resources that exist here and
you know, exploited to their benefit or advantage. It’s about empowering
our youth, making them see that there’s a pathway to success.”
Fall, who also serves as the NBA’s vice president for development in
Africa, is one of basketball’s most prominent figures in the continent.
His vision to start SEEDS and help his fellow countrymen stems from his
own personal experience as one of the first Senegalese to earn an
education through basketball in the United States. As Africans, we have a
responsibility to build our community.
Back in the late 1980s, Fall
played for the University of the District of Columbia after his
basketball talents were discovered by a member of the Peace Corps in
Senegal. “Everything started from there,” says Fall, who also pursued an
MBA from Georgetown University while in the United States.
After graduation, Fall worked for the Senegalese national team and
later he accepted a position as international scout for the NBA’s Dallas
Mavericks. Along the way, his desire to enable youth in his country to
follow in his footsteps and gain a quality education grew even bigger.
Fall realized that the power of sports to mobilize youth and give
them a platform to fulfill their goals could be used for a bigger
impact. The result was the establishment of SEEDS.
“To me, it was about how these young people could use their God-given
talent to get an education, because that happened with me,” he says.
“Most of them didn’t realize that possibility existed. So really, my
thing was, how do we help them identify that this opportunity exists? At
some point I thought, in order to have a bigger impact, to reach more
people, we wanted to really create something back in Senegal where it
would be about, how do we use sports and the power of sports to
contribute in the efforts of socio-economic developments in Senegal and
Africa and beyond?”
SEEDS has so far sent more than 40 Senegalese youngsters to study in
the United States, giving 25 of them the chance to play at American
colleges.
For youngsters like N’Diaye, the lure of a quality education coupled
with a chance to pursue his dream of one day playing in the NBA were
enough to make him decide to go to SEEDS. “It was a good academic
school,” he says. “It’s like, people going there, having the
opportunity, the chance of traveling with basketball and having the
chance of going to some camps and have some coaches take a look at them
and see where their skill is at. “At the end of the day, I wanted to
come to the States because here, sports and education, they combined
it.”
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