NBA names social justice award after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

NBA names social justice award after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
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The NBA is naming a new social justice award after basketball legend and longtime activist Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the league announced Thursday. The Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Award will recognize a current NBA player for pursuing social justice and upholding the league's "values of equality, respect and inclusion."

Each team will nominate one player and a selection committee led by Abdul-Jabbar will meet once a year to choose five finalists, the league said. The winner will pick an organization to receive a $100,000 contribution and the other four will choose an organization to receive $25,000. The inaugural winner and finalists will be announced later this year.

Abdul-Jabbar, a six-time NBA champion and Hall of Famer, is well-known for his social justice work over the years. In a statement, Commissioner Adam Silver said Abdul-Jabar "devoted much of his life to advocating for equality and social justice."

In an interview on "CBS This Morning," Abdul-Jabbar spoke about the award's significance. "I think this award will enable various guys on various teams to start thinking about what they can do to help things in their community," he said. "They can become activists, people who are leaders in their community."

The NBA legend reflected on other trailblazers in sports that have come before him. "Bill Russell comes to mind immediately because I played basketball and I followed his career," Abdul-Jabbar said. "Muhammad Ali was a friend of mine and his example helped me early on when I was in high school — there was someone that I admired and who made me proud to be a Black American."

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar seen in 2017. / Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar seen in 2017. / Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Abdul-Jabbar protested joining the draft for the Vietnam War and in 1968, as a 20-year-old, declined to play for Team USA in the Olympics. "The president of the Olympic Committee, Avery Brundage, is the same guy who had refused to let Jewish athletes compete in the 1936 Olympics because he didn't want to annoy Hitler," he said. "That was somebody who I just couldn't cooperate with him."

The 1968 Olympics famously featured sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos raising their fists during their medal ceremony to protest racism and injustice against Black Americans. "I was glad that somebody represented that aspect of how Black Americans felt about the Olympics," Abdul-Jabbar said.

For him, it's important for athletes to use their voice, such as former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick and Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James.

"Without somebody providing leadership, we're not gonna have any change," he said. "We won't be able to realize the necessary changes if people don't get out there to bring out the issues and show some leadership."

"We all have a right to express our opinions and in our community, in the Black community, we have a duty to deal with issues that bother us because there's been a lot of injustice in our country that's been perpetrated against people of color."

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