Sports

US Coaches Promote Peace With Basketball in Holy Land

By Mary Knight

JERUSALEM (CNS) – Jerusalem is hot, especially in the gym of the Max Rayne Hand in Hand Bilingual School for Jewish Arab Education. Jerusalem is tense, too, with jolting violence this summer over dismantled settlement homes, gay rights and a brutal attack on a Palestinian family.

But those events did not keep Villanova University basketball Coach Jay Wright and Philadelphia 76ers Coach Brett Brown from heading to Israel to engage in peacemaking efforts with youth from PeacePlayers International, an organization that uses basketball to foster team play and tolerance in areas of conflict. Wright also brought his basketball-playing family with him.

The coaches found their way to Israel via Arn Tellem, president of the Detroit Pistons, who is on the board of PeacePlayers International.

“He suggested my family and I would enjoy the experience – he was right on,” said Wright.

PeacePlayers International is a U.S.-based organization that works in areas of global conflict, using basketball to bridge divides, change perceptions, and develop young leaders. It is supported by grants from the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. State Department.

The visiting coaches conducted basketball clinics and conflict-resolution seminars in Jerusalem and Ramallah, West Bank, during a tightly packed week.

Values Through Sports

As the son of a retired New England high school basketball coach, Brown is not new to the idea of teaching values through sports. His father, Bob Brown, taught drills, clinics and a disciplined regimen to basketball players as young as 8 years old.

“The concept of teamwork and playing together are common areas that cross-pollinate both coaching basketball and the PeacePlayers’ initiative,” said Brett Brown.

One of the basketball clinics was held in the West Bank, in a village near Ramallah without any sports facility or athletic equipment. The clinic made a big impact on both coaches.

“It was a first-time opportunity for these kids to learn skills and play basketball … and it was jaw-dropping for me,” said Brown. “Their eyes and expressions left an imprint that will not go away soon.”

After their interactions with Arab youth in the West Bank, it was on to Jerusalem’s Hand in Hand school. Wright, his wife, Patty, and kids Reilly, 17, and Taylor, 22, joined Brown in coaching another clinic of mixed-race students and watched the results as Palestinian, Israeli and American high school players played a game together.