Vatican launches track team of Swiss Guards, nuns
VATICAN CITY — The Vatican has launched an official track team with the aim of competing in international competitions as part of an agreement signed with CONI, the Italian Olympic Committee.
About 60 Holy See runners — Swiss Guards, priests, nuns, pharmacists and even a 62-yearold professor who works in the Vatican’s Apostolic Library — are the first accredited members of Vatican Athletics. It’s the latest iteration of the Holy See’s longstanding promotion of sport as an instrument of dialogue, peace and solidarity.
Because of the agreement with CONI, the team is now a part of the Italian track association and is looking to join the International Association of Athletics Federations. It is hoping to compete in international competitions, including the Games of the Small States of Europe — open to states with fewer than one million people — and the Mediterranean Games.
“The dream that we have often had is to see the Holy See flag among the delegations at the opening of the Olympic Games,” said Monsignor Melchor Jose Sanchez de Toca y Alameda, team president and the head of the Vatican’s sports department in the culture ministry.
But he said that for now, the Vatican was looking to participate in competitions that had cultural or symbolic value.
“We might even podium,” he noted.
Vatican pharmacist-runner Michela Ciprietti told a Vatican news conference the aim of the team isn’t exclusively competitive, but rather to “promote culture and running and launch the message of solidarity and the fight against racism and violence of all types.”
Team members wearing matching navy warmup suits bearing the Holy See’s crossed keys seal attended the launch. Also on hand were two honorary members of the team, migrants who don’t work for the Vatican, but are training and competing with the team, as well as a handful of disabled athletes. The Vatican aims to sign similar agreements with the Italian Paralympic committee.
CONI president Giovanni Malago welcomed the birth of the Vatican team, even though he acknowledged that it might one day deprive Italy of a medal.
“Just don’t get too big,” he told Vatican officials at the launch, recalling how an athlete from another tiny country — Majlinda Kelmendi — won Kosovo’s first Olympic medal when she defeated Italian rival Odette Giuffrida in the final of the women’s 52-kilogram judo event at the Rio de Janeiro Games.
In recent years, the Vatican has fielded unofficial soccer teams and a cricket team that have helped forge relations with the Anglican church through annual tours in Britain. The track team, however, is the first to have a legal status in Vatican City and to be an official part of the Italian sporting umbrella, able to compete more events and take advantage of Italian national coaching and medical resources.
Vatican Athletics’ first official outing is the Jan. 20 “La Corsa di Miguel” (Miguel’s Race), a 10-kilometre race in Rome honouring an Argentine distance runner who was one of the thousands who “disappeared” during the country’s Dirty War.
The choice is significant: Francis, the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, was a young Jesuit superior in Argentina during the military dictatorship’s crackdown on alleged leftist dissidents.