Early Life
Basketball Legacy
Social Justice
Skyhook Foundation
Community Impact
100

This major East coast city is the birthplace where Kareem Abdul-Jabbar entered the world.

New York

100

Following his exit from UCLA, Jabbar achieved this major team milestone in both 1970 and 1971.

Winning A Championship

100

Jabbar made choices that changed his perspective about this issue, prioritizing social equality over athletic records.

Racism

100

Rather than just accepting symbolic apparel or taking a knee, Jabbar states that true activist organizations demand this.

Permanent Dedication

100

An organization owned by Jabbar went to a school in California to hand out motivation along with sneakers and these items.

Backpacks

200

During his youth, Jabbar established an unbroken scoring record for his home state, while raising a ton of these funds for his school.

Athletic Funds

200

Jabbar won this specific historical award honoring the absolute best player out of all the first-year players in the league

Rookie of the Year (ROTY)

200

Much like the legendary boxer Muhammad Ali, Jabbar rejected participating in these international athletic events

The Global Games (The Olympics)

200

Jabbar's Skyhook Foundation targets poor youth by providing practical instruction in math, engineering, technology, and this field.

Science

200

For more than ten years, the Skyhook Foundation has transported kids into these specific areas to protect the wilderness preserve.

National Forests

300

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was drafted by the National Basketball Association (NBA) in this specific year.

1969

300

Usually operating close to the basket, Jabbar was found to be this defensive impossibility because of his immense height.

Unblockable

300

This iconic athlete invited a 20-year-old Jabbar to a meeting to talk about Muhammad Ali's stand against racism.

Jim Brown

300

Jabbar raised the money to pay for the kids' outdoor academic programs by receiving private gifts and selling this personal property.

Jabbar's Own Sports Gear

300

During their 5-day outdoor experience, the kids dive deep into technical mechanics, numerical calculations, and this specific branch of science.

Ecological Physics

400

As a student, Jabbar was a good kid who maintained this standard of academic performance, which he wanted other kids to follow.

Good Grades

400

Jabbar possessed a special weapon on offense because he managed to stay completely clear of these.

All the defenders' hands

400

When an athlete speaks up, they risk losing their living, including getting kicked off teams, losing fan love, and losing these big-money corporate deals.

Brand Deals

400

To address educational gaps, Jabbar donated this exact dollar amount to a local camp to help inner-city students study STEM.

$100,000
400

Jabbar noted that while kids in the back of a traditional classroom are often "somewhere else," they do this actively when out in nature with things in their hands.

Ask questions (or get involved)

500

While visiting schools, Jabbar discussed using his childhood role models from basketball and this other sport to motivate himself to practice every day.

Baseball

500

Because of his unique physical and technical advantages, Jabbar became an unstoppable player on both of these ends of the court.

Offensive and Defensive

500

Over five decades of pushing for justice, white people regularly told Jabbar to do this because moments continuously improve—though he knew progress requires effort.

Remain Calm

500

Jabbar uses his massive audience and platform to speak about forgotten literature that highlights these unknown historical icons.

African American Icons

500

Unlike people who become famous overnight on social media, Jabbar notes athletes earn fame through hard work, discipline, errors, and these painful physical setbacks.

Injuries