While whiling away the hours in his new cold and foreign home recently, Timberwolves rookie Shabazz Muhammad came upon an old movie filmed before he was born, one he hadn't seen for quite some time.
Later, he innocently asked teammate Luc Mbah a Moute if he leads the same kind of life back home in Africa as the main character in "Coming to America."
"I wouldn't be here if I had it like that," Mbah a Moute replied.
Like that, as depicted in the 1988 film starring Eddie Murphy, is a world where an African prince is awakened by a string orchestra every morning, where gorgeous women bathe and dress him and scatter rose petals in his path wherever he goes in a country whose money bears his likeness.
Life apparently was different for Mbah a Moute, a prince in a Cameroonian village because he is the son of an elected village chief. He grew up in what he once called regular middle class, a ceremonial family member respected in his village along with his seven other siblings because of his father's status. He came to America as a teenager pursuing an education and basketball and ultimately achieved a better way of life following other Africans such as Hakeem Olajuwon and Dikembe Mutombo, who led the way to the NBA ahead of him.
Now he is giving back by sponsoring a three-day basketball camp back home every summer for the past four years that invites the country's top 50 teenage prospects, five of whom now are playing Division I college ball in the United States. Another plays at an American high school.
Most famous of that group: Kansas freshman Joel Embiid, a possible No. 1 overall pick in this summer's NBA draft who was but a raw, fleet and gangly 7-footer with gifted feet from playing soccer all his life when he participated in Mbah a Moute's camp in July 2011.
"I didn't have anything like that when I was young, so I just felt like it'd be cool for kids to have something like that," Mbah a Moute said, explaining his camp's genesis. "I just wanted to do a camp to help the kids down there. There was not anything like that being done, so I just felt like I had to do it."