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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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African American History Museum displays Kobe Bryant's jersey |
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In a photo provided by National Museum of African American History and Culture, a jersey that Kobe Bryant wore during the 2008 N.B.A. finals is prepared to go on display at the National Museum of African American History. The National Museum of African American History and Culture via The New York Times.
by Julia Jacobs
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NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Shortly before the National Museum of African American History and Culture opened to the public in 2016, Kobe Bryant took a walk through its sports gallery, which chronicles Black athletes fight for equality and their cultural contributions.
Bryant, whose $1 million donation to the museum gave him the sneak peek, later decided to donate some of his own memorabilia to the collection, including a Los Angeles Lakers uniform and a pair of shoes that he wore during the 2008 NBA Finals.
Those items had not yet made it into the museums gallery, but after Bryants sudden death in a helicopter crash in January, which also killed his daughter Gianna Bryant, the museum has decided to put his jersey on display, it said Monday.
Damion L. Thomas, the museums sports curator, who walked with Bryant through the gallery in 2016, said that part of the reasoning for displaying Bryants jersey was that after Bryants death, he had been seeing visitors congregate by a photo of him that was up in the gallery.
People were coming and taking pictures there and sharing stories about Kobe, Thomas said. It became a place for people to grieve and commune.
The jersey, which Bryant wore during Game 5 of the 2008 NBA Finals, will be on display starting Wednesday on the third floor of the museum in a gallery called Sports: Leveling the Playing Field. The museums collection includes clothing worn by other Black athletes of note, including Colin Kaepernicks jersey, Derrick Roses shirt reading I cant breathe and Muhammad Alis robe.
Bryant is considered one of the museums founding donors because his foundation helped fund the construction of the museum. Congress had pledged to foot half of the bill, but the museum had to find the rest of the financing $270 million in private donations.
The museum had been prepared to put the jersey on display in March, but the pandemic delayed its plans until now. It reopened to the public in September.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
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