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Hakeem Olajuwon in a tussle with Patrick Ewing |
Hall of Fame center Hakeem “The Dream” Olajuwon, who played 18
stellar seasons in the NBA and won back-to-back championships for the
Houston Rockets in the mid-1990s, now spends half of every year in a
place not a lot of Americans, much less basketball players, have ever
visited, nor are planning to live in: Amman, Jordan.
But then again, Olajuwon -- a Nigerian native and devout Muslim who
reportedly speaks five languages fluently, and has never been touched by
any scandal of any kind -- is unlike any other NBA star.
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Yao Ming with Hakeem Olajuwon |
He has enjoyed many accolades on the court -- MVP awards, one of the
50-best players ever, an Olympic gold medal, and tens of millions of
dollars in income and endorsements. However, shortly after his
retirement in 2002, he did not take the familiar path hewn by prior NBA
superstars -- that is, he didn't become a coach, nor a broadcaster, nor a
celebrity pitchman, nor retire to Arizona to play golf. Rather, he
packed up his wife and seven children and relocated to the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan.
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Hakeem Olajuwon actually welcomes Ramadan. “I find myself full of energy, explosive. |
In a 2009 article written by Gary Meenaghan, an Abu Dhabi-based
sportswriter, Olajuwon described Jordan as a “balanced, neutral society”
where he and his family regularly attend mosque and diligently observe
Muslim customs, like Ramadan, and also study Arabic in order to read The
Holy Quran in its original language.
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Hakeem got married to Dalia Asafi (above),then 18yrs old in a pre-arranged Islamic marriage in 1996. |
“Whether people around you are fasting or not doesn’t make any
difference,” Olajuwon said of Ramadan. “If people are eating and
drinking in front of you, the willpower of the Muslim should be
stronger. That’s what the training is for ... I find in the Arab World
that when they are fasting, they say they are weaker and they don’t work
as hard. But it should be the opposite.”
Olajuwon, who earned about $100 million over his career, also spoke about money and its influence on modern athletes.
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Hakeem “The
Dream” Olajuwon's daughter is now a Basketball player and doing well at
it. Born Alon Abisola Arisicate Ajoke Olajuwon in Houston Texas in 1988. |
“What’s more important is that they can manage their fame for a good
cause -- there are lots of people like that,” he stated. “But you also
have a lot of people where they don’t know how to handle success and end
up destroying their career. Someone who is rich, but who doesn’t have
[positive] principles -- these people have no value.”
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Former Houston
Rocket Hakeem Olajuwon quietly opened the doors of a
brand-new flagship store for his new clothing line, DR34M. |
When he is not ensconced in his farmhouse outside Amman, Olajuwon spends
the other part of the year in his Houston-area mansion, where he
manages a number of high-end real estate investments. He also maintains
his contacts with the NBA, by tutoring some of the game's brightest
stars, including Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, Amar’e Stoudemire, Yao Ming
and Dwight Howard.
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A rare picture with mother,Abike Olajuwon. |
However, the core of Olajuwon's life appears to be rooted in Islam.
In a 2008 interview with Texas Monthly, he said: “My religion is a
lifestyle. We pray at certain times of the day, a total of five times a
day. That’s the way it is all around the world. It doesn’t mean I’m [so]
religious; every devout Muslim does it.”
Olajuwon told the Monthly that he had visited and trained in Jordan
while he playing in the NBA, liking the country enough to settle there
after his playing days ended.
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Abi Olajuwon - Nigerian Father (Hakeem Olajuwon)/Afram Mother? (she looks mulatto) ^^^ She's cute! |
“I’m here [in Jordan] with my whole family, so I drive the kids to
school,” he said. “Then I start my exercise, which is hiking in the
mountains. We live in the mountains. It’s beautiful when the sun is
coming up.”
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Seated at front are Debbie Vaughn, left, Abi's aunt; and Lita Richardson, Abi's mother in an earlier relationship. |
Olajuwon living in Jordan is not no unusual considering that it is an
Islamic nation and also one that has received (though not always
welcomed) immigrants and refugees from across the Middle East and North
Africa. The current wave of Syrians fleeing the civil war in their
native country has put enormous pressure on Jordan’s limited resources.
Jordan is already home to some 2-million Palestinians (most of whom are
Jordanian citizens) and up to 1-million Iraqi refugees – all in a
country with an “official” population of about 6.5 million.
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Alon Abisola Arisicate Ajoke Olajuwon plays in the WNBA for Oklahoma |
According to the Jordan Times newspaper, in 2010, foreign-born people
represented almost half (46 percent) of the nation’s population.
However, it is unclear how many Nigerians, like Olajuwon, live in
Jordan – either legally or illegally. In recent years, tens of thousands
of Africans have migrated to the Middle East, including Israel, on
search of jobs, causing a tremendous strain in the host countries.
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Hall Of Fame NBA Legend: Hakeem "The Dream" Olajuwon |
Of course, as a super-wealthy celebrity, Olajuwon would not suffer the
indignities of poverty, rejection and racialism endured by most of his
fellow black Africans in the Middle East.
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Because of his skill in showing dazzling action, Olajuwon is one of five middle legendary NBA players, along with Bill Russell. |
According to the Jordan Times, about 350 Nigerian students are currently
enrolled in Jordanian universities, with about one-third of them
studying aviation. The Nigerian Ambassador, Amman Taofeek Oladejo
Orapaja, wants Jordan and his country to develop deeper ties and has
called on Jordanian authorities to open an embassy in Lagos, noting that
Jordan only has one consul office in the non-Arab part of Africa (that
being in Johannesburg, South Africa). “Nigeria is a regional hub for
Western Africa and certainly an embassy in Lagos would help ties with
other countries in Africa,” the ambassador told the Times last month.
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Hakeem Olajuwon Joins NBA, Exxon Mobil Initiative to Develop Nigeria. Posted on November 21, 2013 by Kunle Binuyo |
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