Leading African-American athletes and team managers have joined in a display of reconciliation designed to relieve American basketball of allegations of institutional racism that have dogged it for months.
Last week the Nigerian manager of the Toronto Raptors, Masai Ujiri, said he hoped for "learning and forgiveness" after a string of incidents in which National Basketball Association executives and owners have disparaged black players
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Last week Bruce Levenson, part owner of the Atlanta Hawks, announced that he would sell his $300m stake in the team after an investigation uncovered an email in which he complained that the team drew an "overwhelmingly black audience".
Danny Ferry, the Hawks' general manager, was then heard assessing British player Luol Deng, currently with the Miami Heat and formerly with the Cleveland Cavaliers: "He's a good guy overall," Ferry was reported as saying. "But he's not perfect. He's got some African in him."
He added: "And I don't say that in a bad way, but he's like a guy who would have a nice store out front but sell you counterfeit stuff out of the back."
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In Ujiri's letter to Toronto's Globe and Mail, the former player said that while Ferry's comments could not be unsaid, a person's true character was discovered through their ability to learn from and then move on from mistakes. "One of the truly important things we must learn is how to forgive," he wrote.
Ujiri and Deng said they did not want young black players to be hurt by the incident. Young players from Africa are renowned around the basketball world for their work ethic and their decency, wrote Ujiri. "If he [Ferry] has made an honest, isolated error, we should forgive and move on."
Other former players suggest that comments read as racist may not always be founded in racial bias. According to the former LA Lakers star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Levenson's leaked email about the Hawks' struggle to "get 35-55 white males and corporations to buy season tickets" because "the black crowd scared away the whites" may have been racially insensitive, but not necessarily racist.
If the predominance of black cheerleaders, hip-hop and gospel music was skewing the Atlanta Hawks fanbase towards a black market, then questioning it was part of the owner's job.
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Ujiri prefers to focus on the positive. He has spoken to Ferry, and Ferry apologised to him and others, including Deng. He hopes to see Ferry at one of his camps in Africa soon. "My hope is that we will soon see Danny Ferry at a Basketball Without Borders camp as well, so that he may come to know us. Because when we know better, we do better."