(New York Post) Giants' pick Berhe is Eritrea's first NFL player

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Wed, 21 May 2014 05:54:58 -0400

http://nypost.com/2014/05/18/giants-pick-berhe-is-eritreas-first-nfl-player/
Giants' pick Berhe is Eritrea's first NFL player

By Paul Schwartz

May 18, 2014 | 10:16pm

You may or may not be able to tell a man by his tweets, but in Nat Berhe's
case, two he shot off right after he was taken by the Giants in the fifth
round of the NFL Draft were revealing.

His first was a simple question: "First Eritrean in the NFL?" Not long
after, he offered a glimpse into his state of mind: "I'm going to give
everything I got to the Giants and everybody who passed on me ... I'm coming."

The first post prompted many responses of nationalistic support.

"As you can see on Twitter everyone is going crazy," Nat Berhe told The
Post. "I'm happy and proud of where I come from."

Where he comes from is a place that does not produce NFL players. His
father, Berhe Asfaha, was born and raised in what is now called Eritrea, a
country in the Horn of Africa sitting along the Red Sea, bordered by Sudan
in the northwest, Ethiopia in the south and Djibouti in the southeast. The
capital city of Asmara has a population of about 650,000. Berhe Asfaha,
when he was 20, immigrated to the United States, first to Texas to attend
the University of Houston. He met his wife, Judy -- a native of Mississippi
-- and the couple eventually moved to Southern California.You may or may not
be able to tell a man by his tweets, but in Nat Berhe's case, two he shot
off right after he was taken by the Giants in the fifth round of the NFL
Draft were revealing.

His first was a simple question: "First Eritrean in the NFL?" Not long
after, he offered a glimpse into his state of mind: "I'm going to give
everything I got to the Giants and everybody who passed on me ... I'm coming."

The first post prompted many responses of nationalistic support.

"As you can see on Twitter everyone is going crazy," Nat Berhe told The
Post. "I'm happy and proud of where I come from."

Where he comes from is a place that does not produce NFL players. His
father, Berhe Asfaha, was born and raised in what is now called Eritrea, a
country in the Horn of Africa sitting along the Red Sea, bordered by Sudan
in the northwest, Ethiopia in the south and Djibouti in the southeast. The
capital city of Asmara has a population of about 650,000. Berhe Asfaha,
when he was 20, immigrated to the United States, first to Texas to attend
the University of Houston. He met his wife, Judy -- a native of Mississippi
-- and the couple eventually moved to Southern California.

Modal Trigger

Nat Berhe #20 of the San Diego State Aztecs in action against the Ohio
State Buckeyes on September 7, 2013.Photo: Getty Images

"I'll be the first Ethiopian player to play in the National Football
League," said Berhe (pronounced Bur-HEY). "That's huge for me and huge for
my family and huge for the people in Ethiopia. It's a big feat. Not a lot
of people from East Africa are in the National Football League. I look at
it all the same, Ethiopia, Eritrea, it's all the same, just different name."

A list of the most famous Eritrean athletes contains almost exclusively
long-distance runners such as Ali Abdallah, Nebiat Habtemariam and Simret
Sultan. Meb Keflezighi last month won the Boston marathon and is an
Eritrean refugee who went to UCLA. Thomas Kelati, an American-born
basketball player from Washington State of Eritrean heritage, was once with
the Lakers in training camp and plays professionally in Europe.

Berhe, a California native who has never visited Africa, but plans to do so
in the near future, has also posted on Twitter: "Shout out to my Habesha
[those residing in the Horn of Africa]people, much love and respect. Will
make you proud."

Berhe's parents own and operate five non-profit group homes in the San
Bernardino, Calif., area that take in psychologically disturbed boys ages
8-15 and he says "I've always been involved in humanitarian-type work."

The Giants hope what Berhe gave San Diego State can transfer to the next
level even though, at 5-foot-10 and weighing in with the Giants this week
at 198 pounds, he looks more like a cornerback than a safety. His timed
speed is ordinary, but that did not stop him from leading his team in
tackles the past two seasons. As for his lack of size, Berhe thinks that's
an overrated component, mentioning top safeties such as Earl Thomas of the
Seahawks and Devin McCourty of the Patriots, who are essentially the same
size as Berhe.

Berhe excelled playing the "Aztec" position, a hybrid safety-linebacker
role that allowed him to blitz and offer run support, a role Marc Ross, the
Giants' vice president of player evaluation, likened to the spot Deon Grant
created on the 2011 Super Bowl championship team. Berhe is not nearly as
big as Grant, though, and it remains to be seen if, as a natural strong
safety, he can cover capably enough and play his aggressive style and hold
up physically to the rigors of the NFL.

Scouts describe Berhe as "instinctive," and said he "plays with abandon"
and has a "very likeable personality."

Giants general manager Jerry Reese said: "We use the term 'football
player;' this guy is one of those guys, a football player. He's all over
the place."

Berhe admitted he had "wide eyes" last Monday walking into the Giants
training facility, seeing the four shiny, silver Lombardi Trophies behind
glass. Through social media, he already has felt some love and believes his
East African background will resonate in this area.

"New York and New Jersey are melting pots and I've been hearing a lot of
responses on Twitter and Instagram, people showing support," Berhe said. "I
feel like I'll get a lot of backing down the road here."



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Received on Wed May 21 2014 - 05:55:40 EDT

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