[外電] Tracy McGrady on Darfur
Source:
http://myespn.go.com/blogs/truehoop/0-38-131/Tracy-McGrady-on-Darfur.html
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Tracy McGrady on Darfur
February 5, 2009 11:55 AM /
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A lot of NBA players have talked about Darfur. As you'll see in an upcoming
documentary (excerpt below and here), Houston's Tracy McGrady has been there.
And what he saw has changed and inspired him. Writing in collaboration with
activist John Prendergast, McGrady describes what comes next.
The points of view here are their own.
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BASKETBALL, WAR, AND HELPING KIDS IN AFRICA
by Tracy McGrady and John Prendergast
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Sometimes when we hear about war and famine in Africa, our instinct is to
turn away. Maybe it is too much. Maybe we have our own problems or think the
problems in America need to be solved first.
We want to tell you that there are solutions to the worst problems in Africa,
they don't need to be that expensive, and there is a way we can all
participate in the solution.
We traveled together to refugee camps deep in the heart of Africa. We met
people who were fleeing the civil war in Darfur and who had trekked for
hundreds of miles to the camps across the border in Chad.
We heard stories of unimaginable suffering, of women who had been raped by
soldiers, of children who had been thrown into fires. That is the human toll
of one of the world's deadliest wars. In order to maintain absolute power,
the Sudanese government has targeted non-Arab ethnic groups in Darfur for
destruction. If that sounds unimaginable, let one of the people we met on our
trip help you understand better what we mean.
We met a young man named Isaac, sitting on a mat in a humble community center
in one of the camps we visited. Isaac happens to be from one of the non-Arab
ethnic groups the government of Sudan has targeted for extinction. We
listened closely to his story to comprehend why a government would try to
destroy a whole group of people based on their ethnic identity.
Up until late 2003, Isaac was a student in a high school in West Darfur. His
village wasn't wealthy, but his family lived well, growing all kinds of
crops, nurturing large orchards of fruit trees, and raising goats and a few
cows. He had heard about some distant fighting involving rebel groups, but he
was too focused on his schooling to pay much attention.
But suddenly one December morning, everything changed.
Isaac had just left a wake at his mosque -- nearly everyone is Muslim in
Darfur -- when his village came under attack. The Sudanese government and its
Janjaweed ("Devils on horseback") militia allies, Darfur's version of the Ku
Klux Klan, blew into town, hunting all the males in the village, no matter
what their age. At least 150 men and boys were killed that morning, including
42 children, the village was looted, and most of the houses were burned to
the ground. Isaac lost two uncles, two aunts, and two brothers.
Scared and devastated, the survivors hid in the orchards outside the village.
For the next two months, the Janjaweed scouted out their locations and warned
them, "If you don't want to turn to ashes, you better leave this place." But
for Isaac and his neighbors, "this place" was their home, and they didn't
want to leave.
Two months later, however, the Janjaweed -- backed by government forces --
attacked again. Many more villagers were killed. But this time, many of the
women who were trying to hide were raped.
Isaac and his surviving neighbors trekked for three months before they
finally found their way to the safety of the refugee camp in Chad. There we
found him, three years later, trying to make sense of his ordeal.
He told us that the government of Sudan had decided to destroy the
communities like his from which rebels were being recruited, even though no
rebels lived in his village. And he said the Janjaweed want their land, so
they have to get rid of the people on it. This is why there is an alliance
between the government and the Janjaweed, in order to destroy the non-Arab
communities of Darfur.
We are just two guys, so alone it is probably true that we can't do much. But
we are not alone. When we went down to Auburndale High School (Tracy's high
school near Orlando), we found hundreds of students who wanted to get
involved with us in reaching out to the people of Darfur. So we decided to
find a way to link students here in the U.S. with young Darfurians who want
to go to school.
To do this, we created the Darfur Dream Team Sister Schools Program. It
creates connections between schools in the U.S. with schools in the Darfur
refugee camps, with the ultimate objective of creating a quality education
for every young refugee from Darfur. Players from around the NBA are pitching
in, as is the United Nations and the movie company Participant Media.
We don't need to look away when we hear about Darfur. There is something
tangible we can do that can provide an education to thousands of young people
in Darfur at the same time as it enriches the lives and widens the horizens
of young people here in the U.S. We can change the world, as our new
president says. With the Darfur Dream Team, we're going to do it one student
at a time.
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