Ban Ki-Moon speaks to Vatican Radio after Pope Francis
meeting
Ki-moon on Wednesday before
the Sport
at the Service of Humanity'sFirst Global Conference on Sport and Faith,
which is being held in the Vatican this week.
The event has been organized
by the Pontifical Council for Culture, the United Nations, and the
International Olympic Committee.
After his meeting with Pope
Francis, the Secretary General spoke to Vatican Radio’s Alessandro Gisotti.
Below, please find a
transcription of the interview
BAN KI-MOON: I’m grateful to
His Holiness Pope Francis, the Vatican, and also the International Olympic
Committee for organizing this very meaningful event, where people can be
inspired to promote peace and development through sports. Sports is a universal
language. It transcends all the national barriers. It transcends all
ethnicities and nationalities and whatever differences one may have. It can
have instant power of mobilizing people’s energy, and also commitment for
development. Togetherness, oneness, can easily be realized through sports. In
that regard, the United Nations is very much committed. The UN General Assembly
has designated April 6, every year, as the International Day of Sports for
Development and Peace, and I have appointed a special envoy to promote peace
and development through sport. The United Nations and the IOC have been
building a very strong partnership; now the Vatican – the Holy See – is
joining. The Vatican, IOC, and the United Nations can have a very strong driving
force to promote peace and development through sports.
Question: How important
has the role of Pope Francis been in promoting peace and reconciliation, in
your opinion?
BAN KI-MOON: His Holiness
Pope Francis is a man of peace; a man of vision. He is a man of more voice. It
has been a great privilege and honor for me to work with him. For example, when
world leaders adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, it was the
Pope’s urging and appeal to world leaders: He urged world leaders to have a
stronger and visionary commitment for the world – people and planet – so that
they can live in peace and prosperity through partnership. And also, it was His
Holiness who, through his encyclical on climate change, Common Home [Laudato
si’] – he termed it: Our planet earth is our common home. We are all seven
billion people, and all creatures should live together, and that has given much
inspiration. Strong voice: so that the world leaders adopted climate change
agreement in Paris last year. I expressed my deepest admiration and gratitude
to His Holiness during my audience with him.
Question: Finally, sport
is an eloquent example today of this possibility and opportunity of the Holy
See and the United Nations to play a role together. Do you think even in the
construction of a more human society – peace, reconciliation, human dignity -
that the Holy See and the United Nations, the Church and the United
Nations, can work together?
BAN: The Holy See, the
Vatican, and Christianity and other religions, they share common goals,
visions, and values as the Charter of the United Nations: Peace, respect for
humanity, and human rights. And also through sports we can promote sustainable
development. In that regard, it is very important that the United Nations has
been working very closely with the Holy See, and also a strong partnership with
the IOC. The idea of having this Faith and Sports for Peace and Development all
came from His Holiness, and also the United Nations and IOC. That is why this
is unprecedented that the Secretary General of the United Nations, the IOC, and
Holy See work together for com
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