Darfur Gets McGrady's Attention

On a visit to his home town of Auburndale, Fla., Tracy McGrady found students interested in learning about how to help a conflict-torn region in Africa.
On a visit to his home town of Auburndale, Fla., Tracy McGrady found students interested in learning about how to help a conflict-torn region in Africa. (By Gary Bassing -- Nbae/getty Images)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 15, 2008; Page E01

He listened to stories from parents who had seen their babies thrown into fiery huts and burned alive, from orphaned children who had seen their parents shot and killed, from women who had been held captive and raped repeatedly.

He watched 4-year-olds walking around, unattended, with infants on their backs. Children sat on his lap to show him drawings, mostly covered in red crayon to symbolize the blood spilled in their villages. And then, there were the boys, ages 14 or 15, carrying AK-47s for protection.

By the time Houston Rockets all-star Tracy McGrady's five-day visit to three refugee camps for Darfur's displaced residents in eastern Chad ended last summer, he had lost about 10 pounds from a lack of food and some restless nights. On his last night in this war-torn region of central Africa, McGrady cried and couldn't stop staring at the ceiling of his tent.

"It was sad, man. It really was," McGrady said in a recent interview. "I don't [care] how tough you are, you go over there, it will have an impact on you."

McGrady always thought he had a tough upbringing growing up in tiny Auburndale, Fla., but his definition of tough changed after spending time with people living in squalor in shoddy, cramped homes made of plastic sheeting, with little food and no plumbing. Through the horror and the sadness, though, he kept hearing the same theme: Parents wanted their children to get an education. The children wanted to learn.

"They feel education is survival," McGrady said.

McGrady, an 11-year veteran and two-time NBA scoring champion, decided he would return to the United States and make their stories known with a documentary titled "Not a Game," which is expected to be completed in the spring.

He has also established the T-Mac Alliance, a humanitarian project that will work with other charitable organizations to raise money to build schools and train teachers in central Africa. The initiative includes a sister schools program, Stand Up For Darfur, in which a dozen American high schools will raise funds to provide books and supplies for children at the refugee camps.

Darfur is a region of western Sudan about three-quarters the size of Texas, where an armed conflict has led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands and forced about 2.5 million to flee their homes since 2003. The United States has classified what has occurred in Africa's largest country as genocide.

McGrady felt compelled to visit the refugees after hearing about the atrocities from Chicago Bulls forward and Sudan native Luol Deng and Rockets teammate and former Georgetown star Dikembe Mutombo, who has championed humanitarian causes in Africa and opened a $29 million hospital in his native Democratic Republic of Congo last July.

McGrady once cited safety concerns as a reason for backing out of the 2004 Athens Olympics and was involved in a controversy last year when he initially threatened to skip next month's NBA All-Star Game in New Orleans, fearing the city was unsafe. Yet, he still went to the refugee camps in Chad, which were less than three miles from the Janjaweed, a major player in the conflict.

"I was terrified a little bit," McGrady said. "I don't fault people for not wanting to go over there. A lot of people don't know a lot about it. People can hear about the devastation and the malicious acts going on, but people say, 'Man, that's messed up' and go about their day. Me, I was in the same boat. Then, I was like, 'Let me go over there.' And it really touched me."


CONTINUED     1        >

More in the Wizards Section

Wizards Insider

Wizards Insider

Ivan Carter and Michael Lee provide exclusive coverage of the Wizards and keep you up-to-date with NBA news.

Season Preview

Meet the Wizards

Take a look at the 2007-08 season, complete with an interactive roster and Dan Steinberg's BogBios.

© 2008 The Washington Post Company