RUMTEK, India - When Italy takes the field in Sunday's World Cup final,
it will have some unusual support - some 300 monks at one of Tibetan
Buddhism's holiest monasteries will be praying and cheering for the Azzurri.
It's Italy's fair play during the tournament that has impressed the holy men
at the Rumtek monastery, high in the Himalayan mountains, monks said.
"I am praying for Italy's victory like many of my colleagues here. The team
has reached the finals after a long gap and (are) playing in a fair manner,"
said Tenzing Dorji, a 27 year-old monk.
However, he does concede that there may be one or two secret France fans
there.
Most of the younger monks are keen soccer fans, said Karma Gyaltsen, a senior
monk in charge of the monastery's administration.
"I'm sure they are going to break the stillness around here a bit with their
shouts Sunday night," he said.
But that's OK, Gyaltsen is an Italy supporter too.
While he also admires their style of play, his devotion to the Azzurri, goes
deeper.
He's a big fan of Italian soccer legend Roberto Baggio. "I like him. He is a
Buddhist after all."
Baggio, who played in three World Cup's for Italy, converted to Buddhism in
the 1980's.
The monks at Rumtek, one of the holiest Tibetan Buddhism sites outside Tibet,
will gather in a hall, braving the near freezing weather and staying up till the
early hours of the morning Monday to watch the game.
And soccer fever won't abate after the World Cup, Dorji said. The monks are
avid players too.
"Football is our favorite game. Wednesdays aside, we play the game during our
lunch-break," he said.
Rumtek is 24 kilometers (15 miles) west of Gangtok, the capital of
northeastern India's Sikkim state, which borders Tibet.