Disgraced Orlando Magic fan turns worst night of his life into a life of inspiration.
Please read this article from the Orlando Sentinel’s sports page.
Once-disgraced Orlando Magic fan Hooman turns barb to life of inspiration
Seven words nearly ruined his life.
Seven stinking words.
“Hey, Dikembe, you look like a monkey!”
“I never knew seven words could lead to so much ugliness,” says Hooman Hamzehloui.
You probably don’t recognize the name; you just know him as the racist fan who was banned by the NBA and the Orlando Magic for a full season after a heckling incident two years ago.
This is a story about how the worst night of Hooman’s life turned into the best thing that ever happened to him. It’s a story about how his heckling and harassing words turned into inspirational and invigorating ones. It’s a story my old high school coach would have loved because he used to tell us this about the game of football and the game of life: “You’re going to fall. Just make sure you fall forward.”
Hooman has certainly done that since the transcendent moment in October 2006 when he transformed from obnoxious heckler into a motivational speaker.
Two years ago, Hooman owned a big-time real estate company, four luxury cars and an opulent home in a gated Windermere community. He was high-rolling Magic fan, held in such high regard by the team that he was chosen to host a season-ticket selling party for other well-heeled corporate types. Magic players and officials attended the party.
“One of the greatest nights I can ever remember,” he says.
Just 24 hours later, he would endure the worst night he could ever imagine. He attended the Magic’s home game against Houston and sat in his usual seats on the front row right by where the visiting team comes onto the court.
He says he never drank or cursed at games, but he was a master heckler who always peppered opposing players with derisive nicknames. When Atlanta’s Josh Childress would come to town, Hooman always called him “Urkel” because of his resemblance to the geeky ’80s sitcom character. And when there were dead times during games, fans around him would urge Hooman to stand up and start his heckling act.
Like so many sports zealots, being a wacko fan became his alter-ego, his release, his fix. But everybody knows a fix can destroy you if you don’t control it.
“Hey, Dikembe, you look like a monkey!”
When those seven words came out, everything changed. In two seconds, he went from good-natured heckler to hate-filled racist. Dikembe Mutombo, a 7-foot-2 black man from the Congo, gave Hooman the finger and had to be restrained.
Hooman was escorted away, but he thought he’d be back the next game. He never dreamed he’d be banned for a year and become the poster child for racism in sports.
Maybe it’s a cultural divide (Hooman was born in Iran and came to this country when he was a kid), but to this day Hooman claims he didn’t know “monkey” was a racially offensive term.
“I had no idea why everybody was so upset,” Hooman says. “I was just trying to have some fun with Mutombo.”
But the fallout was heavy and immediate. The NBA, coming off the infamous Detroit-Indiana brawl between fans and players, was cracking down on unruly fans. And even though Hooman immediately issued a written apology, the NBA banned him for a season.
“I take full responsibility for what I said,” Hooman says now, “even though I really didn’t know what I was saying.”
He got death threats and hate mail. Friends quit calling. His two young children came to him and said, “Daddy, what did you say to Mutombo?”
His business went into the toilet even more so than most real estate businesses. Word got around. There was one anonymous comment posted on a real estate Web site urging buyers not to use Hooman as a realtor because he is “scam artist, a racist and an Iranian who . . . sends his money to fund terrorism.”
“I felt like I had become public enemy No. 1,” Hooman says.
With his reputation destroyed, he endured months of depression, spending most of his time sleeping in bed or lying on the couch.
Then one day, after a friend urged him to read a motivational book, he decided he would turn the biggest negative he has ever faced into the biggest positive. He’d always wanted to be a motivational speaker, but he never had the guts to try. Until now.
Prisoners, school children, corporate executives — he’ll talk to anybody who will listen. He has a motivational Web site, www.HoomanCan.com. He’s finishing a book — Mutombo and Me — about his life-altering experience and says he will donate a big portion of the proceeds to Mutombo’s foundation, which was set up to improve health care and fight disease in the Congo.
“I’m glad the incident happened,” Hooman says now, “because I feel better about my life than I ever have.”
Helping instead of heckling.
Inspiring, not inciting.
Maybe it’s time to move past those seven ugly words and remember seven more beautiful ones that we should all make part of our vocabulary.
“To err is Hooman,” somebody wise once wrote, “to forgive divine.”
Mike Bianchi can be reached at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com.
www.HoomanCan.com
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February 24th, 2009 at 10:06 pm
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February 25th, 2009 at 1:17 am
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February 27th, 2009 at 8:11 pm
[...] I turned the worst night of my life into my life changing experience Disgraced Orlando Magic fan turns Worst Night of his life, into a life of Inspiration [...]
March 17th, 2009 at 2:40 am
[...] Disgraced Orlando Magic Fan Turns the Worst Night of his life into a life of Inspiration [...]
March 17th, 2009 at 3:13 am
[...] Disgraced Orlando Magic fan turns Worst Night of his life, into a life of Inspiration [...]
March 17th, 2009 at 3:38 am
[...] Disgraced Orlando Magic Fan Turns the Worst Night of his life into a life of Inspiration [...]
March 19th, 2009 at 1:42 am
[...] Disgraced Orlando Magic Fan Turns the Worst Night of his life into a life of Inspiration [...]
September 22nd, 2009 at 3:04 am
[...] is nothing in life that can make your world so bad that you need to take someone else’s life. I have faced problems in my life that I thought would destroy me. I have faced adversity that I thought would be the end of me. Guess what? I survived and every [...]
September 23rd, 2009 at 6:57 am
Monte,
Thank you for your feedback, it is very appreciated. It doesn’t matter where you live, what you do for a living, what challenges you face, there is no excuse for killing someone. I know countless people who have faced the same challenges as the ones that Mr. Ward did and none of them chose to kill anyone.
Help is always available. You just have to ask for it. In fact, there is more help available today then there ever has been. Even if he was going to lose everything he ever had, he still didn’t lose enough to give him the right to kill.
Everyone has the potential to be good or evil. It all comes down to the choices that we make. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.”
If you or anyone out there know of anyone who is in need of help or in a desperate situation. Please have them contact me so I can get them the help that they need. My step-father is one of the best psychiatrists around. Between my contacts and his contacts, we will help anyone who needs help. Anyone can be saved as long as they don’t lose hope.
I deeply care about everyone in the world. I hope that everyone enjoys the beauty that life has to offer.
Yours truly,
Hooman Hamzehloui