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‘shoot for the stars’

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Huntley basketball player Amanze Egekeze (center) and his parents, Liza and Gilbert, pose for a portrait at their home in Lake in the Hills. (Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com)

Gilbert Egekeze leaned back on a sofa in his family’s meticulously styled Lake in the Hills home, arms folded, with a smile on his face.

Egekeze spoke with pride about his four children, while his wife Liza sat a few feet away on a loveseat, also smiling.

They came to the U.S. from Nigeria in the 1980s. Since then, both have earned multiple degrees – Gilbert became a medical doctor, Lisa a registered nurse. They are raising four children in a home where education, religious faith, love and humility provide the foundation.

“Be humble and respectful to people you meet along the way, don’t look down on anybody,” is one of Gilbert’s favorite messages. “And don’t think you’re above anybody.”

Another is “Shoot for the stars. Even if you hit the moon, you’re still above the Earth.”

Then, there is “Don’t ever feel that you have arrived, you have to still work on your game.”

Education and faith top the list for Gilbert and Liza. Any notoriety through athletics, which their second son Amanze has gained and which their youngest son Uchenna someday will see, is considered a bonus. Although any drive to be the best in basketball is similar to the one that pushed Gilbert and Liza to keep striving.

They are pleased that Amanze, a 6-foot-7 junior forward on Huntley’s boys basketball team, has offers from six NCAA Division I schools to play basketball. But they are even more delighted that he is a 3.5 student who works as a teacher’s assistant in the Children’s Ministry Department at Life Changers International Church.

“[Education] is a part of the psyche where we come from,” Gilbert said. “Education is stressed more than anything else. That’s why most of us [from Nigeria] come here, for the education. We try to stress the same thing to our children, that education comes first. The achievements in sports, and all that, are secondary. That can go any day.”

Remarkable ride

Gilbert immigrated to the U.S. in 1985 to earn a Master of Chemical Engineering at Oklahoma State. While he worked as a process engineer at ARCO in Houston, he met Liza, who had come to the U.S. in 1988 to study at Texas Southern University.

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