Pope recalls playing soccer with
homemade ball as child
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| Pope Francis meets with Scholas Occurentes students in Maputo |
Pope Francis meets on Thursday morning with Mozambican
members of Scholas Occurrentes, telling them a story from his childhood.
By Devin Watkins
On his first morning in Maputo, following Mass in the
Apostolic Nunciature, Pope Francis met privately with a group of leaders and
participants in programs promoted by the Scholas Occurentes Foundation, along
with the local director, Enrique Adolfo Palmeyro.
Matteo Bruni, the Director of the Holy See Press Office,
announced the spontaneous encounter.
Homemade fun
In off-the-cuff remarks, the Pope told the young students
about his own childhood in Buenos Aires.
He noted that young people often play on Mozambique’s
beautiful beaches with a soccer ball made from strips of cloth, and recalled
his own youthful experience.
“When I was a child I played with a ball made of cloth
strips,” he said, “because at that time soccer balls were made of leather and
were very expensive.”
Sport and work
The Pope said that, in Argentina, “cloth-strip balls became
a cultural symbol of that time, so much so that a popular Argentine poet even
wrote a poem entitled “cloth-strip ball”.
He concluded his brief remarks saying that sport and work go
hand-in-hand.
“With this symbol, you gather the entire story of amateur
sport – and the work that goes into it – as well as joy for the game,” he said.

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