HOUSTON (AP) â" Samuel Dalembert stepped off the plane and barely recognized the land where he grew up.
Two frantic days after a magnitude-7.0 earthquake rumbled across his native Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010, the veteran NBA center returned to the Caribbean nation and could hardly absorb the chaos and horror.
Victims missing limbs lying helplessly in the littered streets. Children covered in blood, screaming for their parents. Buildings pulverized and homes crushed into twisted piles of rubble.
âYou felt like this was the end,â Dalembert recalls. âItâs like the end of Earth.â
Dalembert lost a cousin and several close friends among the estimated 300,000 killed. Another 1.5 million residents were left homeless. Roads were impassable. Communication was impossible.
âYou looked at the country,â Dalembert remembers, âyou felt like it was Armageddon. It was devastating.â
Two years later, the NBAâs only Haitian-born player prays for progress, while tempering his frustration that more hasnât been done to rebuild his crippled country.
Recently signed by the Houston Rockets, the 6-foot-11 Dalembert is on a mission to help, donating about $650,000 and establishing a foundation for relief efforts and putting down $1 million out of his own pocket to break ground on a sports academy for Haitian children.
âI know Iâm not going to be able to save the whole place,â he said. âBut I know that I can make a difference in some young oneâs life, and give them hope.â
The 30-year-old Dalembert made four trips back home this summer while the NBAâs labor dispute lingered. He estimates that the country is âabout 20 percentâ back to the way it used to be.
President Michel Martelly acknowledged this week that the rebuilding process has been slow, and that he has made mistakes since he was elected last May.
Dalembert has become acquainted with Martelly, a pop star in Haiti when Dalembert was a boy, and heâs optimistic that the new president has put the reconstruction on the right track.
âMy buddy has become president of the country now, and heâs tried to really make a change,â Dalembert said with a proud grin. âHeâs really tried to make things move in. Sometimes, youâve got parties that try to hold things down and try to get their own people in. Itâs politicking and I try to stay away from that.â
Before the disaster, Dalembert took classes at Stanford on how to start a charitable foundation to aid his already impoverished country. It launched in 2007. But when he witnessed the scope of the catastrophe three years later, the foundation kicked into high gear, and he began mapping out plans for the first of several community centers that he wants to model after YMCAs in America.
A former first-round pick, Dalembert felt compelled once he reached the NBA to use his fame and wealth to give back to his fellow Haitians, a lesson his parents instilled in him.
He has been an active participant in the NBAâs Basketball Without Borders Program, a campaign aimed at improving education, health and fitness for young people around the world, and has worked in the aftermath of the earthquake with Medishare, a Miami-based nonprofit agency trying to improve health care in Haiti.
âLooking back, and you say, âWow, God kind of gave you this opportunity, coming away from there and being in the league,ââ he said. âI take pride in that. I feel like Iâm very blessed, and Iâll continue to do the best I can and help.â
The country was hardly well off before the earthquake, and Dalembert has vivid memories of his own hard-scrabble upbringing.
Food was sparse and when someone cooked, the children shared their paltry portions without hesitation. Electricity was even scarcer, and controlled by the government, so when Dalembert cracked the books to study mathematics, history and Latin it was by candlelight most of the time.
âWhen they did give back electricity, one time a week, or maybe one time every two weeks,â he said, âMomâs trying to iron as many clothes as she can for the days to come, because you donât know the next time they are going to give it back to you.â
He moved to Canada with family members as a teenager, found his passion in basketball and earned a scholarship to play at Seton Hall. Dalembert became a shot-blocking specialist in college, and the Philadelphia 76ers took him in the first round of the 2001 draft.
Heâs in his 10th NBA season now, a respected presence in the Rockets locker room after less than a month with the team. His fierce national pride emerges when he talks about Haiti, even as he opens up about the most painful memories.
Dalembert smiles when he thinks about the countryâs future, the faith that he puts in Martelly and the resolve of Haitiâs people.
âItâs in our blood. Itâs in our blood to fight, and get things,â he said. âWe basically learn to operate under stressful situations, and we keep on moving, we keep walking on the same path and weâre hoping for a better future. If it doesnât happen, hey, life continues.â
But he also worries about the safety of family members who remain there, though much of his family has moved to Miami, and a younger brother is going to school in Philadelphia.
Dalembert tried to convince his father, a retired former government official, to leave. Emmanuel Dalembert refused.
âHe said, âSon, in all the life youâre living, thereâs one time you can see your country can be rebuilt,ââ Samuel Dalembert said. âSome people never live to see that. He said, âI will never leave this country, and I will be there.â Heâs a patriotic guy.â
Samuel understands.
âItâs like when I go back home,â he said. âYou see your youth, youâve got that sense of pride in you, and you be like, âWow, this is my country.â
âI always tell some of those kids, âListen, there are countries out there who were not independent until this day,ââ he said, âand the only thing you can say is, âThis country is yours, and youâve got to make the best of it.ââ
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