Rome hosts first Catholic-Muslim cricket match

Rome (Matters India): Sporting history was made in Rome at the weekend as an all-Muslim cricket team played against St Peter’s Cricket Club, comprising Catholic seminarians.

St Peter’s won by four runs at the closely contested match at Rome’s Capannelle cricket ground. British and Australian ambassadors to the Holy See, who were among the spectators, presented both the winners’ trophy and the runners up cup.

The St Peter’s XI was launched in 2013 under the auspices of the Pontifical Council for Culture, with ecumenical and interfaith relations as an important part of the club’s mission.

The Mount Cricket Club from Yorkshire in the north of England was founded back in the 1970s by children of Asian immigrant families and is today involved in both charitable initiatives and wider community integration.

As the players strode out for the start of their historic match, Philippa Hitchen of Vatican Radio talked to the chairman of the Mount Cricket Club Hanif Mayat about the early days and about the potential of sport for promoting interfaith harmony.

Hanif explained that his cricketing journey began in white Britain, where an Indian Muslim stood little chance of joining a cricket club. However, his love of the sport led him and a friend to found the Mount Cricket Club, which continues to push boundaries and now also boasts its own girls’ team.

While the introduction of women to the club has met with resistance from community elders, Hanif said it continues to address equality issues and is involved in initiatives to help the disabled and homeless.

He describes the game as a ‘language’ through which people of all different nationalities, colors and creeds can communicate and learn to respect one another.

While Mount Cricket Club is made up of all Muslim members at the moment, anyone is welcome to join, Hanif said. Having started out with home-made bats, wickets and tennis balls, Hanif has proven his club is the one to beat within the wider context of building community cohesion and interfaith relations.

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