Posted on 05/27/2006 6:09:01 PM PDT by sully777
Subtitle: Andre Pitts Finds Success With An Iranian Basketball Team
TEHRAN, (CBS) Sitting on a black leather sofa in his sparsely furnished North Tehran apartment, Andre Pitts speaks with a yearning for home.
"I'm from America and I love my country." he says. "I miss my friends."
Most of all, Pitts misses his wife and young daughter. "I'm scared of one thing: That I go home and she doesnt recognize me," he says. "That would kill me. I am doing all this basically for her to help better her life."
Pitts is the American star of a champion Iranian basketball team, Saba Battery. The team is owned by Iran's Ministry of Defense the same Ministry of Defense that the United States accuses of trying to make a secret nuclear weapon. It's an irony not lost on Pitts.
"But I play basketball," he says. "I am not a politician. I am not a soldier."
Since 1979, when student revolutionaries in Teheran took 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, relations between the United States and Iran have been minimal. The United States still enforces sanctions against Iran and has led the move recently to punish Iran through the U.N. Security Council for its controversial nuclear research program. Individuals on either side of the diplomatic divide have been isolated from one another as cartoon stereotypes: citizens of the Great Satan versus residents of the Axis of Evil.
In that context, Andre believes that he and the 20 or so other American currently playing basketball in Iran are good ambassadors. "I think Ive done a good job of representing my country as both an athlete and a man," he says.
It was money that brought Andre and players like him to the Middle East. Before coming to Iran, he played in Syria and Lebanon. The level of play is not nearly what it is in the NBA, but the money is very good: between $4,000 and $30,000 a month.
It's money Pitts has spent carefully on the family and home he never had as a boy. He was orphaned at a young age and had to be rescued from a foster home in Texas by his grandmother and various aunts, who struggled to give him a stable childhood.
"I'm taking care of my family by playing here," he says, turning on his computer to show a screen crowded with photos: his beautiful new house in Austin, Texas, his beloved 2-year-old daughter and a proud holiday snap of Andre and his wife, relaxing on a cruise ship. "I wouldn't have the life I have in America if it wasn't for playing ball in Iran."
Pitts' life in Tehran is one of Spartan routine that takes him from his apartment to the gym, and from the gym to practice, then home again .Occasionally, he is invited out to a meal or a party with his teammates but on the whole, life in the Islamic Republic is sedate.
Pitts is quick to point out the silver lining.
"You can go out, but not to clubs. There's no drinking. You're not staying out until three or four in the morning because nothing's open that late. It's good for an athlete. You go home, get your rest, don't have to worry about a hangover.
"In fact," he says, "I think it's added a couple of years to my game."
It's a couple of years he hopes to spend playing in the Islamic republic, with Saba Battery, where he is adored, and where, he says, he enjoys the camaraderie of an exceptionally close-knit team.
The biggest threat to his plan is politics specifically Iran's insistence that it will continue to enrich uranium. It is conceivable that the diplomatic fallout could mean American citizens would face expulsion from Iran.
"I hope it can be resolved in a peaceful way," says Pitts, the proud American, "because I love it here, too."
Anything for a paycheck, eh?
Sports, commerce, and scholastics are very powerful forces for peace. The Persians are very compatible with Americans, they love the same things we do and they do well when they reside here. The hard liners' days are numbered.
Cannot blame him for doing the best he can for himself.
Cannot blame him for doing the best he can for himself.
However, I would posit that none of the above examples were backed by a religion, specifically Islam...
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