Life Without Basketball

Life Without Basketball

By Tim O'Donnell & Jon Mercer

  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release Date: 2019-11-05
  • Advisory Rating: PG
  • Runtime: 1h 28min
  • Director: Tim O'Donnell & Jon Mercer
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
9/10
9
From 1 Ratings

Description

Life Without Basketball takes us inside the world of Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir. As a record-breaking high school star and college athlete, her life as a basketball player had structure and a clear forward path. Bilqis was raised to follow the Quran and has been wearing hijab since the age of fourteen. She extends this practice onto the court as well, covering arms and legs underneath her uniform and wearing a tightly wrapped headscarf. When she began her college career in 2009 she became the first NCAA Division I athlete to do so. Her story attracted the attention of national media and later, the White House.When discussing her future with an agent, Bilqis encounters a controversial ruling forcing her to choose between her religion and the sport she loves. As she withdraws from the world of a professional athlete, she finds a new voice as an advocate at the center of an international fight for sport and human rights.

Trailer

Reviews

  • Inspiring

    5
    By Hoop Friend
    This film is for everyone, whether you’re and athlete or not! It takes a look at the impact of one person’s faith and persistence. It showcases an athlete beyond her sport; and a Muslim woman beyond her religion.
  • Powerful

    5
    By BatlahB
    I’ve seen an early screening of this at the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield Massachusetts. I felt so many emotions, mostly sadness and anger, for Bilqis on a personal level, but also for all athletes who are discriminated against. When people have the power to stop the trajectory of a person’s life, and do it based on the issue of religion, it has to inspire a strong reaction from us all and the reaction must inspire change. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to feel outrage when discrimination is practiced at such a high and influential level as FIBA. We need people like Bilqis who will share the intimate details of their life so we can see the human side of these discriminatory rules that skate along unchecked and unnoticed by most people. Thank you to all those who helped bring Bilqis’s story to light.

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