FILE -
In this March 17, 1966, file photo,
heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad
Ali arrives at a Veterans
Administration office in Louisville,
Ky., to appeal his 1A draft
classification. (Photo: GS, AP)
FILE -
In this
Jan. 24,
2017,
file
photo,
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar,
third
from
left,
joined
by
former
and
current
professional
athletes,
from
left,
Jim
Brown,
Takeo
Spikes,
Chris
Webber,
Anquan
Boldin
and
Tommie
Smith,
pose for
photos
alongside
Dr.
Harry
Edwards
after a
sports
and
activism
panel
entitled
"From
Protest
to
Progress:
Next
Steps"
in San
Jose,
Calif.
Abdul-Jabbar
boycotted
the 1968
Summer
Olympics.
At the
same
games,
held in
Mexico
City,
American
track
athletes
Tommie
Smith
and John
Carlos
held
raised
fists
covered
in black
leather
gloves
as the
national
anthem
played
after
winning
gold and
bronze
medals
in the
200-meter
race.
(Photo:
Marcio
Jose
Sanchez,
AP)
Black
athletes
have
long
history
of not
sticking
to
sports
By
ERRIN
HAINES
WHACK
APNews.com
This
year’s
NFL
season
featured
two of
America’s
pastimes:
football
and
race,
with
pre-game
protests
dividing
fans
along
color
lines
and
making
Sunday
afternoons
among
the most
segregated
hours in
the
country.
While
some
fans
would
prefer
players
stick to
sports,
many
black
athletes
have
chosen a
different
path by
protesting,
making
people
uncomfortable.
“The
whole
purpose
of the
demonstrations
is to
get
(fans’)
attention,”
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar
said in
an
interview
with The
Associated
Press.
“These
are the
people
that
ignore
the fact
that
people
are
being
shot
dead in
the
street.
They’ve
found
ways to
ignore
it.”
For
weeks,
some NFL
players,
most of
them
African-American,
knelt
silently
on the
sidelines
as the
national
anthem
played
before
kickoff.
Their
goal: to
raise
awareness
about
disparities
in
policing
in
communities
of color
, and
about
persistent,
systemic
racism
in
America.
It
was a
new
approach
to an
age-old
problem.
For
generations,
black
athletes
from
heavyweight
boxer
Jack
Johnson
to
tennis
champions
Venus
and
Serena
Williams
to
former
NFL
quarterback
Colin
Kaepernick
have
protested
in ways
large
and
small to
highlight
injustice,
galvanize
support
and move
the
country
forward.
Often
met with
backlash
from
fans
uninterested
in
mixing
sports
and
social
issues,
many
have
taken
stances
that
have
cost
them
their
careers.
The
roots of
black
athlete
activism
can be
traced
to the
dawn of
black
freedom.
Even
after
slavery
ended,
black
Americans
were
barred
from
full
participation
in the
public
sphere:
denied
the
right to
vote,
access
to mass
media,
or equal
housing
and
schools.
Because
they
were
blocked
from
entry in
most
civic
institutions
for much
of the
20th
century,
black
people
found
public
visibility
and
expression
in other
arenas —
often
cultural
ones,
like
music
and
sports.
Johnson
fought —
and beat
— white
boxers
at the
height
of Jim
Crow,
when
blacks
were
presumed
to be
inferior,
and
dated
white
women,
upending
the
social
norms of
the day.
When
he
finally
lost, it
would be
a
generation
before
another
black
boxer
would be
allowed
to
compete
at such
a level,
and the
message
had been
sent to
black
athletes
that
disrupting
society
came
with
consequences.
“It’s
because
of what
happens
to him
that
others
know
they
have to
toe the
line,”
said New
York
University
historian
Jeffrey
Sammons.
“They
can’t be
seen as
defiant
or
opponents
of the
system .
They
know
they
can’t
succeed
without
living
up to
expectations
and
being
humble,
unassuming
and
supportive
of the
established
order.”
Then
came
along
Muhammad
Ali, who
was not
one to
toe the
line.
Ali
was the
most
visible
and
influential
athlete
of his
generation
when he
protested
the
Vietnam
War as
racially
unjust
by
refusing
to be
drafted
in 1967,
a move
that
cost him
his
livelihood,
derailing
his
fighting
career
for
years.
Ali’s
actions
influenced
others.
Basketball
player
Abdul-Jabbar
boycotted
the 1968
Summer
Olympics.
At the
same
games,
held in
Mexico
City,
American
track
athletes
Tommie
Smith
and John
Carlos
held
raised
fists
covered
in black
leather
gloves
as the
national
anthem
played
after
winning
gold and
bronze
medals
in the
200-meter
race.
Abdul-Jabbar,
who at
70
represents
a bridge
between
Ali and
Kaepernick,
went on
to a
storied
NBA
career,
but
Smith
and
Carlos
returned
home to
the
threat
of
having
their
medals
taken,
and
faced
difficulty
finding
coaching
jobs.
“It
was an
international
stage
that was
being
used to
promote
how
unified
and
wonderful
the
world
is, but
black
Americans
at that
point
were
still in
a very
tough
struggle
to
obtain
their
rights,
both
human
and
political,”
Abdul-Jabbar
said of
the 1968
games.
“The
fact
that
(Smith
and
Carlos)
used an
international
platform
to speak
for
people
who
usually
don’t
have any
power to
be heard
made it
all the
more
significant.”
Carlos
said
Mexico
City was
the only
place he
could’ve
made
such a
statement.
“At
that
time,
for me,
there
was no
other
vehicle
than the
Olympic
Games,”
he
recalled.
“I felt
like the
humanitarian
issues
at that
time, as
well as
the
humanitarian
issues
of
today,
are more
compelling
to me
than an
Olympic
medal. I
love the
Olympics
and I
love
sports,
but I
love a
just
cause
for
humanity
even
greater.”
“It’s
because
of what
happens
to him
that
others
know
they
have to
toe the
line,”
said New
York
University
historian
Jeffrey
Sammons.
“They
can’t be
seen as
defiant
or
opponents
of the
system .
They
know
they
can’t
succeed
without
living
up to
expectations
and
being
humble,
unassuming
and
supportive
of the
established
order.”
Then
came
along
Muhammad
Ali, who
was not
one to
toe the
line.
Ali
was the
most
visible
and
influential
athlete
of his
generation
when he
protested
the
Vietnam
War as
racially
unjust
by
refusing
to be
drafted
in 1967,
a move
that
cost him
his
livelihood,
derailing
his
fighting
career
for
years.
In
this
Feb. 25,
1966
file
photo,
While
Illinois
Athletic
Commission
listened,
heavyweight
champion
Muhammad
Ali
speaks,
in
Chicago.
Ali had
criticized
his
imminent
army
draft.
(AP
Photo/File)
Ali’s
actions
influenced
others.
Basketball
player
Abdul-Jabbar
boycotted
the 1968
Summer
Olympics.
At the
same
games,
held in
Mexico
City,
American
track
athletes
Tommie
Smith
and John
Carlos
held
raised
fists
covered
in black
leather
gloves
as the
national
anthem
played
after
winning
gold and
bronze
medals
in the
200-meter
race.
Abdul-Jabbar,
who at
70
represents
a bridge
between
Ali and
Kaepernick,
went on
to a
storied
NBA
career,
but
Smith
and
Carlos
returned
home to
the
threat
of
having
their
medals
taken,
and
faced
difficulty
finding
coaching
jobs.
“It
was an
international
stage
that was
being
used to
promote
how
unified
and
wonderful
the
world
is, but
black
Americans
at that
point
were
still in
a very
tough
struggle
to
obtain
their
rights,
both
human
and
political,”
Abdul-Jabbar
said of
the 1968
games.
“The
fact
that
(Smith
and
Carlos)
used an
international
platform
to speak
for
people
who
usually
don’t
have any
power to
be heard
made it
all the
more
significant.”
Carlos
said
Mexico
City was
the only
place he
could’ve
made
such a
statement.
“At
that
time,
for me,
there
was no
other
vehicle
than the
Olympic
Games,”
he
recalled.
“I felt
like the
humanitarian
issues
at that
time, as
well as
the
humanitarian
issues
of
today,
are more
compelling
to me
than an
Olympic
medal. I
love the
Olympics
and I
love
sports,
but I
love a
just
cause
for
humanity
even
greater.”
It
is a
sentiment
shared
by NFL
players.
The
killing
of
mostly
unarmed
black
men by
mostly
white
police
officers
sparked
the
Black
Lives
Matter
movement,
which
has
again
drawn
black
athletes
into the
national
conversation
on race
. The
sideline
protests
in the
NFL —
started
in
August
2016 by
Kaepernick
— have
been the
most
prominent
display
of
players’
engagement,
though
black
athletes
in
baseball
and
basketball
have
also had
smaller
displays
of
activism.
Because
sports
are such
a
prominent
aspect
of
American
life,
they
remain
an
effective
way to
bring
attention
to
issues
of
racial
injustice.
“This is
our
inheritance,”
said
Howard
Bryant,
senior
writer
at ESPN
and
author
of the
forthcoming
book
“The
Heritage:
Black
Athletes,
A
Divided
America,
and the
Politics
of
Patriotism.”
“You’re
not
allowed
to check
out,”
Bryant
said.
“This is
going to
continue
until
the
United
States
respects
the
black
brain
more
than the
black
body.
Then
sports
can go
back to
what it
was
supposed
to be —
just a
game.”
Media —
and
social
media in
particular
— has
helped
in
recruiting
athletes
to the
cause,
explained
Color of
Change
Executive
Director
Rashad
Robinson,
whose
online
civil
rights
organization
has
joined
with
athletes
in
addressing
systemic
racism
and
mobilized
its
membership
to
boycott
the NFL
and its
corporate
sponsors.
Such
stands
have
often
come at
a cost,
even for
today’s
players,
who are
far more
prominent
and
wealthy
than
their
predecessors.
Like
players
who
spoke
out
before
them,
they
have
been met
with
violence
and
vitriol,
described
as
unpatriotic,
ungrateful
and
disrespectful.
“The
public
is used
to black
guys
selling
sneakers
and
making
jump
shots,”
said
Bryant.
“Do
white
people
want to
hear
what
black
people
have to
say? No,
they
don’t.
Does it
need to
be said?
Yes.”
Abdul-Jabbar
agreed,
tying
Ali’s
fate to
Kaepernick’s
as two
athletes
who
sacrificed
their
livelihoods
at the
height
of their
careers
for a
greater
cause.
“Anybody
that
knows
anything
about
football
will
tell you
that he
is a
talented
athlete
and
should
be on
somebody’s
team,”
Abdul-Jabbar,
author
of
“Becoming
Kareem:
Growing
Up On
and Off
the
Court,”
said of
Kaepernick.
“I think
he’s
being
blackballed.”
But
with the
cost are
also
benefits.
Using
the
universal
language
of
sports
as a
platform
to
discuss
race
reveals
racism
and
galvanizes
support
to end
it,
Robinson
said.
“Part of
why
people
are
paying
attention
is
because
of
exactly
who they
are,” he
said.
“Throughout
time, it
has been
the
people
with
reputations
and
something
to lose
whose
risk-taking
has
helped
result
in
change.”