Luol Deng: the shining light of South Sudan's Bright Stars
27th July 2024
The President of the South Sudan Basketball Federation has led the team to its first-ever Olympics in just four years.
- As a player, Deng was an icon of Sudanese basketball, then South Sudanese basketball after the country's independence in July 2011.
- He followed in the footsteps of the giant Manute Bol, the first southern Sudanese to play in the NBA between 1985 and 1995.
- Deng's 15-year career in the American league saw him shine in the Chicago Bulls jersey from 2004 to 2014, earning two All-Star selections in 2012 and 2013.
Refugee turned NBA star Luol Deng has worked tirelessly
throughout his career to develop basketball in his troubled homeland South
Sudan as federation president, patron and sometimes coach.
And in just four years he has made South Sudan's
"Bright Stars" one of the best teams in Africa, reaching a historic
milestone as they compete for the first time at the Olympics in Paris.
As a player, Deng was an icon of Sudanese basketball, then
South Sudanese basketball after the country's independence in July 2011.
He followed in the footsteps of the giant Manute Bol, the
first southern Sudanese to play in the NBA between 1985 and 1995.
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Deng's 15-year career in the American league saw him shine
in the Chicago Bulls jersey from 2004 to 2014, earning two All-Star selections
in 2012 and 2013.
He also competed in the 2012 Olympics under the flag of
Great Britain, where he grew up during his itinerant youth as a refugee.
After retiring in 2019, Deng thought he would take some time
to "just relax" and think about what was next.
"And then came the opportunity" to lead the South
Sudanese team, he told olympics.com last year.
"And with that opportunity came the vision and ideas
and dreams," he said.
"I believed that we had the talent, that we are one of
the best teams in Africa, that we can dominate in basketball just like how
Kenya or Ethiopia dominate in track and field or like Jamaica does in
sprinting."
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Now aged 39, Deng has always been active on behalf of his
homeland, whether working with international organizations or his own
foundation and publicly urged people to sign up to vote in the referendum on
South Sudan's independence in 2011.
Despite breaking away from Sudan after more than two decades
of civil war, the world's newest nation has never known peace.
It was torn apart by its own civil conflict from 2013 to
2018 and is still struggling to recover, mired in poverty and political and
ethnic violence and frequently hit by climate disasters.
Originally from the city of Wau, Deng fled the war in Sudan
as a child with his mother and eight brothers and sisters, for Egypt.
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It was there that he was introduced to basketball by one of
his brothers, who followed training sessions given by Manute Bol during visits
to the Sudanese community.
He then moved to Britain where his father, the former
Sudanese minister Aldo Deng, was granted political asylum.
His basketball potential quickly took him to the United
States, to Blair Academy and then to the prestigious Duke University before the
NBA.
At Blair, he forged an unbreakable friendship with Royal
Ivey, now coach of the South Sudanese team.
"I remember seeing Luol walk into the gym at 14 years
old, with one pair of shoes and just a dream," an emotional Ivey told AFP
earlier this month, tears streaming down his cheeks.
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"His service to his country, his service to his people
is one of none," he said in an interview during a training session in the
Rwandan capital Kigali.
"The talent is in South Sudan, but the resources aren't
there. Luol has been the figurehead to push that forward, so the talent and the
resources can connect and build that chemistry."
With his personal charisma, determination and also his own
money, Deng is carrying out his project, which goes from building courts across
the country to creating a competitive national team.
"It's not easy but it's exciting," Deng told
olympics.com.
Juggling time zones, he himself called players in Australia,
the United States and Asia to persuade them to join his
adventure. Occasionally, he also coached the national team.
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"Luol is a symbol. Growing up we all got to watch him in the NBA... We wanted to be like Luol," said 27-year-old power forward Wenyen Gabriel.
"To see him continue trailblazing, even after he's done
playing... standing tall and pouring into the federation and giving us the
opportunity so we can all give back together, it's a way to follow in his
footsteps," he told AFP.
"Without him, we would not be where we are right now.
And we're going to continue to keep going forward."
A constant presence in the team since January 2020, captain
Kuany Kuany has seen Deng's work flourish.
"One of his favourite quotes that he always says is 'Build it and they will come'. That's what's happening now."