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South Sudanese teens at center of recruiting controversy

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Though the African students’ path to Mooseheart began when the school’s basketball coach reached out to A-HOPE, Hart denied that anyone at the school was interested in their athletic abilities before they arrived.

“Nearly any child growing up in [South] Sudan is in somewhat dire straits, living in poverty with no health care and no opportunity for education,” he said. “And that’s the focus for these boys, the education.”

The school is part of Mooseheart Child City and School, a 1,000-acre residential center for children from troubled homes that is supported by the Loyal Order of Moose and the Women of the Moose. Of its 216 students in preschool through grade 12, about 20-25 were born in Africa and immigrated to the United States with their families, Hart said.

By contrast, the South Sudanese athletes came here on student visas, helped by A-HOPE, which stands for African Hoop Opportunities Providing an Education. Many of A-HOPE’s students play on the founder’s AAU basketball team during the summer.

Manute Bol, the Sudanese-born center who spent 13 seasons in the NBA, played a role in the teens’ narrative. Bol spoke at the Mooseheart campus in 2005 and, according to court documents filed by Mooseheart’s attorneys, inspired basketball coach Ron Ahrens to help African youth.

He took a mission trip to Tanzania in 2009 to work in orphanages. Upon returning, Ahrens started making calls to find Sudanese students that Mooseheart could help.

In January 2010, Ahrens left a voicemail with A-HOPE founder Mark Adams. That May, Adams responded, asking if the school would take a Sudanese student who was losing his scholarship at a high school in Nebraska. That student finished his education at Mooseheart, but never played competitive sports because of IHSA rules that require athletes to sit out a year after switching schools.

Later in 2010, Adams asked Ahrens if the school would take other Sudanese students. Told that Mooseheart would accept students regardless if they were athletes, Adams encouraged the four students to apply, according to the court filing.

The IHSA’s recruiting rules say that member schools are responsible for violations committed by coaches, staff, students “or any organization having any connection to the school.”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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