ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER JOHN PAUL II TO
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING OF THE "FÉDÉRATION
INTERNATIONALE DE FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION" (FIFA)
Monday,
11 December 2000
Mr
President, Ladies and Gentlemen,
With
great pleasure I welcome you this morning on the occasion of the Executive
Committee Meeting of FIFA. I greet
the President Mr Joseph Sepp Blatter and his Vice-Presidents, the
Secretary-General Mr Michel Zen-Ruffinen, the Presidents of the International
Confederations, and all of you who are responsible for overseeing the world of
football, a truly universal task.
Football is indeed a world-wide sport, and this is now more evident than ever,
given the massive level of popular interest and media coverage which the sport
receives. Yours is a global responsibility, with more than two hundred countries
and one hundred and twenty million players involved in your Association.
An immense power lies in your hands, and it must be used for the good of
the human family.
You are
administrators certainly; but you are educators as well, since sport can
effectively inculcate many higher values, such as loyalty, friendship and
team-spirit. It is especially important to keep this in mind at a time when
football has also become as it were a global industry. It is true that
football’s financial success can help to sustain praiseworthy new initiatives,
such as FIFA’s “Charity Project”. But
it can also contribute to a culture of selfishness and greed.
That is why the finer values of sport must be emphasized and passed on
through the bodies represented in your Federation.
As a
sport shared by people of different ethnic, racial, economic and social
backgrounds, football is an excellent means of promoting the solidarity so
greatly needed in a world deeply affected by ethnic and racial tensions.
FIFA’s “Fair Play Campaign” is a positive sign that you are eager to do
your part in using sport to build a climate of respect and understanding between
people.
Sport is
educational, because it takes human impulses, even potentially negative ones,
and turns them to good purpose. The
young learn to have healthy competition without conflict. They learn that they
can enter an arena in which their opponent is not their enemy. For this reason,
I express the earnest hope that FIFA will continue at all levels to tackle the
problem of violence, which does so much harm to the game.
In fact,
for all its importance as an education for the great challenges of life,
football remains a game. It is a
form of play, both simple and complex, in which people take joy in the wonderful
possibilities of human life -
physical, social and spiritual. It
would be a sad day if the spirit of play and the sense of joy in fair
competition were to be lost. You
are the guardians of the true spirit of the game. You have taken as your motto
the words “For the Good of the Game”. Have
no doubt, the good of the game can also be an important part of the good of the
world! As a pledge that the
Almighty is with you in this task, I invoke upon you and those whom you
represent the divine gifts of peace and joy. God bless you all!
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