It was in London that he
decided to purchase one particular model of wrist watch, one which cost
$15,000.
For a former Premier
League footballer, a hero in his native Cameroon, and one of the most
successful African footballers of all time, the prospect of buying a watch was
hardly the most daring of all ordeals.
So after taking a glance
at the watch and getting out his credit card, he said he asked the sales
assistant for some help.
"First, I saw her
turn and look at her coworkers like, 'Uh, what should I do?'
"Eventually, she let
me see the watch. I looked at it and said, 'OK, I'll buy it.'
"I took out my credit
card and when she went to go run it through the machine; she came back and said
that it was declined.
"I asked her, 'Was it
declined or did you not want it to be accepted?' because this has happened to
me many times and she told me, 'No, it was declined.'"
Eto'o, who played in
London with Chelsea last season, called his brother who was nearby and it was
he who brought a new credit card so the transaction could be completed.
While Eto'o does speak
English, his brother has a far wider vocabulary and was able to ask just what
had occurred moments earlier.
"My brother can
afford this and the way you're treating him shows that you think just because
he's black, he can't afford this watch," said the sibling.
Eto'o then takes up the story,
saying the lady in the store said she was wary of him because "we had some
Nigerians in the store the other day that came with fake credit cards."
"If one of my own
makes a mistake, they judge us all. Tomorrow, if a white man in Africa makes a
mistake, we should judge all white people? No!
‘‘The security guard from
Senegal kept trying to justify what the lady said and I asked him where he's
from. When he told me, I said, 'Ahh. If I gave you my name, you will recognize
who I am’’?
‘‘He shrugged and I said,
'I'm Eto'o.' He went, 'Nooooo! Just yesterday, my wife and I were talking about
you! Can I take a picture with you and send it to my wife’’?
‘‘I said, 'Yes, we can
take a picture, but you made a mistake because you can't judge people by the
color of their skin,' so he told me it wasn't because of our color’’.
‘‘I told the lady, 'In my
next interview, I'm going to tell them about this and I'll name the store so
everyone can know that you treat people differently here', added Eto'o
referring to the saleswoman’’.
"She then realized
that I could have reported what she had just done, but it was a mistake. It was
a mistake of her to categorize.
"I don't think she's
a racist person, but she stereotyped all black people as 'those people".
Culled from UKmail.com
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