Michael Jordan Shows His Class by Fulfilling Former High School Staffer’s Final Wish

Michael Jordan shared an emotional FaceTime conversation with a former Laney High staff member in hospice care after learning about her final wish to speak with him again.

Apart from the brand itself, Michael Jordan spent most of his life playing basketball. The Chicago Bulls legend is one of the main reasons the NBA is so big at the current time. However, the best thing about him, apart from his competitive drive, is that he never forgot his roots.

Recently, one such incident in Wilmington, North Carolina, revealed a far quieter side of the basketball legend, one that had nothing to do with trophies.

A former staff member at Emsley A. Laney High School, identified as Ms. Etta, is currently in hospice care through Lower Cape Fear LifeCare. While diving into the memory lane of her favorite memories from her years working as a transportation coordinator at Laney High, she shared one final bucket-list wish.

Ms. Etta revealed she wanted to speak with Jordan again. However, it was a deeply personal request. She had watched Jordan grow from a teenager walking the halls of Laney High into one of the greatest athletes the world has ever seen.

A social worker named Wendy attempted several times to reach the six-time NBA champion, unsure whether the message would ever reach the layers surrounding a global icon.

However, just like in a movie scene, the phone rang.

According to Lower Cape Fear LifeCare, Wendy answered and heard a voice ask, “Is this Ms. Etta?”

It was Jordan. Wendy immediately drove to Ms. Etta so the two could connect over FaceTime. Jordan and Ms. Etta laughed, exchanged memories, teased each other, and revisited moments from their shared connection to Laney High School.

The room reportedly filled with tears as Ms. Etta’s family watched the conversation unfold.

Michael Jordan Wants To Keep His Philanthropy Private

For years, MJ faced criticism from those who believed he was not doing enough publicly to support charitable causes and Black communities. But Jordan has long insisted that the absence of publicity never meant the absence of impact.

The 14-time NBA All-Star previously addressed those criticisms directly, pushing back against the perception that philanthropy matters only when cameras are present.

“I get criticized about not giving back to the community — well, that’s not true,” Jordan said, according to Basketball Network. “I do, I just don’t go out and try to seek publicity from it.”

That philosophy has followed him throughout much of his life after basketball. While many athletes choose to publicly document donations and activism, Jordan historically preferred a quieter approach.

For those unaware, Jordan attended Laney High from 1978 to 1981, famously failing to make varsity as a sophomore before eventually becoming a basketball superstar.

Despite building a global legacy, he has consistently maintained ties to Wilmington and Laney High. One such moment of giving back to the community included donating $1.1 million to the school in 2019.