Since Harvard’s season came to a close, Webster has begun traveling to Boston-area schools, speaking about the importance of education.
“I’ve always been interested in education, and I love being around kids.” Webster said. “Education can open so many doors. It opened so many doors for me.”
As a kid growing up in Washington, D.C., Webster never imagined he would end up at Harvard. Until he was 14, Webster attended Deal Junior High School in the city.
He was planning on enrolling at a private school in D.C. until a family friend showed him the Landon School, in Bethesda, Md.
Webster applied, and soon he was traveling nearly an hour each morning from his home in D.C. to the small prep school.
“At first I was like ‘I cannot be here, I don’t know any of these people, they’re not from where I’m from,’” Webster recalled. “They were talking about things I didn’t even know about.”
But Webster’s parents, a social worker and an accountant, insisted he stay at the school, and soon enough he adjusted to his new environment.
“My parents were like, ‘You need to stay here; this is going to be good for you,’” Webster recalled. “I listened to them, so now I’m at Harvard. It all paid off.”
Webster hopes his story can serve as an inspiration.
“I feel like with my background in basketball I feel like I can maybe touch a kid or two and hopefully change their lives,” Webster said.
***
This summer, Webster will travel to Cuba with Full Court Peace, an organization founded by former Harvard basketball graduate assistant Mike Evans.
Along with seven other Americans, Webster and Evans will build a court in Alamar, Cuba, over the course of six days.
While playing professional basketball in Northern Ireland in 2007, Evans founded the organization with the goal of “unit[ing], strengthen[ing] and educat[ing] local and global communities through the creation of youth basketball teams.”
Since then, Evans and his organization have regularly worked in Juarez, Mexico, Bridgeport, Conn., and—for the past four summers—Cuba.
Read more in Sports
Sailing Fails To Qualify for NationalsRecommended Articles
-
NOTEBOOK: Long-Range Effort Sparks OffenseWhile the Harvard men’s basketball team has excelled this season at reaching the free throw line and converting opportunities there—its accuracy of 77.1 percent at the charity stripe is good for third in the nation—the Crimson still has a ways to go when shooting from long range.
-
Crimson Emerges Victorious from Ivy DogfightAll 40 minutes were required to determine a winner in the Harvard men’s basketball team’s Friday night matchup against Yale ...
-
Crimson Boasts Balanced LineupSo often coach speak rings hollow. Teams talk about each person knowing his role or doing what it takes to win, while at the same time players are checking box scores and chasing personal accolades. But with the Harvard men’s basketball team, I’m beginning to believe the clichés.
-
Crimson Crossovers: Christian Webster and Caron Butler
-
Students Elected to College Democrats of Massachusetts Exec BoardTwo Harvard undergraduates will serve on the executive board of the College Democrats of Massachusetts, the college branch of the Massachusetts Democratic Party.
-
Taking the Lead