The Day

Vatican launches track team

- By NICOLE WINFIELD

Vatican City — The Vatican launched an official track team Thursday with the aim of competing in internatio­nal competitio­ns as part of an agreement signed with the Italian Olympic Committee.

About 60 Holy See runners — Swiss Guards, priests, nuns, pharmacist­s and even a 62-year-old 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 long-standing 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 1 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 was neither a short-term nor medium-term goal, and 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 press 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.”

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