The global sports and financial world has been rocked by a surprise announcement from Aliko Dangote – Africa’s richest man, a symbol of power and philanthropy. He has just announced plans to organize the “African Children’s Basketball Charity Tournament”, a global charity basketball tournament with a total prize value of up to 10 million USD, all of which will be used to build schools and hospitals for poor children in the sub-Saharan region.

But what has made the world stir is not just the huge number or the noble purpose of the tournament – but the special invitation that Dangote sent to Angel Reese, the rising star of American basketball.
In a press conference broadcast live worldwide, Dangote declared:
“Angel Reese is a symbol of effort, resilience and spiritual strength. I believe that her presence will bring more attention to our humanitarian mission to the world.”
Just a few hours later, social media exploded. Millions of people from the US, Nigeria, South Africa to Brazil simultaneously posted with the hashtag #AngelForAfrica, calling on the female athlete to accept. The video of Dangote speaking reached more than 50 million views within 24 hours, becoming the hottest topic worldwide.
However, while everyone was waiting for an enthusiastic answer, Angel Reese silenced the world.
In a short video posted on her personal page, she sat in a simple room, wearing an old hoodie, no makeup, her eyes filled with tears. Her voice trembling, Reese said:
“I grew up in a neighborhood where children had no playgrounds, no doctors, and sometimes no faith. If I have the opportunity to help someone feel hope, I will do it… but not for the accolades, but because I was one of those children.”
That sentence stunned the whole world. Comments flooded in from fans, athletes, and politicians. Even Dangote himself responded with a touching post:
“You’re not just invited to Africa – you’re part of Africa. The doors are always open for a soul like you.”
In just 48 hours, Angel Reese’s video had been viewed more than 100 million times, and was called “the most human moment of 2025.” CNN, BBC, ESPN, and dozens of major newspapers all reported on the video, describing her as “a new symbol of compassion across borders.”
Sources close to Reese revealed that she has been quietly planning to travel to Lagos next month to meet Dangote and discuss organizing basketball training sessions for local children.
If that happens, it will be more than just a sporting event – it will be a meeting of power, compassion, and a sharing heart.
And perhaps, as one comment shared hundreds of thousands of times put it: “Dangote may build hospitals. But Angel Reese is building trust.”
News
What Navy SEALs Saw SAS Do in Mosul That They Never Talked About Again
5 November 2016, East Mosul, Iraq. The compound sat in near total darkness, fog. Chief Petty Officer Marcus Reeves pressed his back against concrete still warm from the day’s heat, and watched the street through night vision that turned the…
What CIA Operators Said After Working With British SAS In Baghdad
March 2006, Sadr City, East Baghdad. The Toyota Land Cruiser rolled through checkpoint Bravo at 2:17 in the morning with no headlights and no escort. Inside sat three men wearing local dress, dishdasha robes, keffiyeh scarves, faces darkened with theatrical…
“You Yanks Are Pathetic” — 6 SAS Did What 200 US Marines Couldn’t
October 2010, Nad-e-Ali District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Six men moved through a maze of dried mud walls in absolute silence. They wore no identification patches. Their weapons were customized beyond recognition. Each man carried exactly what he needed and nothing…
What US Marines Said After Watching a British SAS Sniper Work in Helmand
August 2010, forward operating base, Edinburgh, Helmond Province, Afghanistan. Marine Corporal Marcus Delaney stood at the observation post, watching the treeine 800 m south, where the Helmond River carved through farmland that had killed three Americans in the past week….
What Spetsnaz Soldiers Said After Encountering British SAS in Afghanistan
October 2008, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The Russian special forces officer sat on a folding chair inside a prefabricated container at Camp Bastion, staring at a map of terrain he thought he understood. Colonel Dmitri Volkov had spent 7 years fighting…
The Yanks Brought $5 Million Worth of Equipment to the Exercise. The SAS Brought What They Carried.
The Yanks brought $5 million worth of equipment to the exercise. The SAS brought what they carried. The American contingent arrived at the multinational exercise facility in a convoy that took the better part of an afternoon to unload….
End of content
No more pages to load