| Positively Nigerian: Nigerian NFL Players are giving back |
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| Written by NVS/Houston Chronicle | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sunday, 09 March 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Giving back to Nigeria
By MEGAN MANFULL
The two boys looked at each other and tried to hold their breath as
long as they could. They were moving to the United States, a country
they knew only through tales their father told them and what they had
seen on television. "We were going to let go of that last breath of Nigeria air when we landed in the United States," said Arinze, 22. "I guess it was kind of silly. We thought we were going to hop on a plane and be there in no time."
"Nigerian kids are all basically raised the same," Ogunleye said. "There are two constants. We depend on family and we believe in giving giving until it hurts." Ogunleye has talked with Idonije for years about organizing an effort to aid those in Nigeria, but their talks never amounted to much action. Ogunleye gave away scholarships in Nigeria a few years ago when he visited, but he always wanted to do more. Neither he nor Idonije expected a 20-year-old rookie to accomplish what they had hoped to start. "This speaks a lot of the young man's character," said Idonije, who was born in Lagos, Nigeria, and lived there until he was 4. "I know at 20, that's not something I was focused on. "Amobi sees the bigger picture in life, and I'm glad to be working with him." Amobi was taught similar values as Ogunleye growing up. Arinze and Chidume, 24, share Amobi's home in Houston with him. Okoye's father calls daily to check on all three of them. Edna and Augustine Okoye's message of giving sank in so well with their sons it has caused Edna concern recently. Amobi's decision to organize the Nigeria trip wasn't met with sheer enthusiasm from her. "It's not exactly what I hoped for," Edna said. "It was a very stressful season for him. I told him, 'I don't think you have rested in the past five years.' All through college, he was busy trying to get his (psychology) degree in 3 1/2 years. Spring, summer and fall, it was nonstop. Then in December of last year, he started to prepare to go to the draft." "He has never really rested, so I was thinking this would be a time for him to really relax. Really, fully relax. Putting this thing together, you're not extending any physical energy, but the mental energy is draining." there have been sleepless nights. But the small trip they started planning in December has grown and developed into something they are proud of. "No player that we talked to turned us down," Chidume said. "Everyone is seeing what we are seeing from it. We want to help improve other people's lives. Help improve living conditions and help improve education. "Now, sponsors were different, of course. Many of them said, 'Well, you know we can't help you with this, but keep us posted.' But the athletes, jumped on board." The players are financing much of the trip out of their own pockets. Their closest advisers are family members. Ogunleye's father is in Emure, Ekiti State, overseeing the completion of the water wells, which are in his hometown.
All in the family Augustine Okoye will travel and help the group all week. In the end, he will evaluate what they need to do to make the next trip more successful."This is always the case in something new, you don't depend on outsiders to do it," Augustine Okoye said. "When you start something new, you are going to have to put a lot of your own money and a lot of your own effort there. People are going to sit by the side and watch to see if you fly or fail. And when you fly, that's when everybody is going to come to your aid and say, 'Oh, don't worry about this. I'll pay for this. I'll do this and this and that and that.' But the initial steps are going to have to be 90 percent, if not, 100 percent your effort." The players are OK with that. Ogunleye wants to make sure it remains driven by the players participating. He doesn't want corporations taking it over, and players just going through the motions during the trip. The players insist the key is to simply return. Idonije said the success will be measured not by what they accomplish in one week, but what they can accomplish years from now. "If it's something we just do once, that is not a success to me," Idonije said. "It has to continue. It has to grow and become a functioning thing on its own so that when there is no more Israel, no more Amobi and no more Adewale, the program is still there and providing opportunities for people who need it." megan.manfull@chron.com
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Posted by Robot| 09.03.2008 11:40