Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the cross

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Glasgow Celtic goalkeeper Artur Boruc has been cautioned for blessing himself in a match against arch rivals Glasgow Rangers. He made the sign of a cross as Catholics do, but this angered Rangers fans in the stadium. Why? Because Celtic are supported by Catholics and Rangers are supported by Protestants and, up until the 1980s, only Catholics could play for Celtic and only Protestants could play for Rangers. Celtic fans are usually nationalists, wanting independence for Scotland, whereas Rangers fans are pro-British unionists. As in Northern Ireland, there is a hatred, in Scotland, of Catholics amongst its majority Protestant population. The rivalry between Glasgow Rangers and Glasgow Celtic is the biggest and most intense in British football.
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Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the cross
25th August 2006




Celtic goalkeeper Artur Boruc has been cautioned for blessing himself in a match against arch rivals Rangers.




The Catholic church has blasted a decision by the Procurator Fiscal to issue Celtic goalkeeper Artur Boruc with a caution for blessing himself.

Polish star Boruc was rapped for making the sign of the cross at Ibrox (Rangers' stadium) in an Old Firm match last season.

The caution was issued after a six-month police investigation into the incident, which is said to have angered a section of the Rangers support.

Boruc is reported to have been completely baffled by the decision to issue him with the warning But the move has angered the church and prominent Scottish Catholics including outspoken composer James McMillan and Celtic author Dr Joe Bradley.

Last night Peter Kearney spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland, slammed the move. He said: "It is quite worrying that firstly some spectators saw fit to complain, but even more so that police felt that the act merited investigation.

"Incitement to religious hatred normally involves demeaning the signs and symbols of a person's faith "So, it would be interesting to know how a gesture of reverence falls into any of these categories.

"This decision could lead us down a very intolerant road.

"What if a family in a restaurant say grace and make the sign of the cross, would they be deemed as having inflamed the sensibilities of non-Catholics?" Renowned composer and Celtic fan James MacMillan, who's spoken out in the past about sectarianism, said the fuss over Boruc's act was a 'disgrace'.

He added: "It is completely ridiculous but then cases like these always are.

"It's a disgrace that in this day and age, such a fuss is being made over an incident like this. "It is a mark of shame that people cannot express their faith in a certain manner."

Dr Joe Bradley, editor of two books about Celtic and lecturer at Stirling University, said Boruc should be free to bless himself anywhere he likes.

He said: "This seems to tie in with the police report on Boruc who had apparently upset a section of the Rangers support.

"Only when people like Artur Boruc can bless themselves wherever and whenever they want will Scotland's sectarian problem be on its way to being solved." A Crown Office spokesman said that following careful consideration it was decided to use an alternative to prosecution in Boruc's case.

Options open to the fiscal included a straight warning or a warning plus payment of a monetary penalty known as a fiscal's fine.

Celtic have refused to comment ever since the caution was issued to their Polish keeper last week.

But last night Eddie Toner former General Secretary of the Celtic Supporters' Association said the club had "hung Boruc out to dry". He said: "It is sad that Celtic as a club appear to have made no objection to or comment on the caution.

"They seem to have hung Artur Boruc out to dry. "Celtic have a responsibility to protect the community from which they derive support, especially when that community come under attack.

"Perhaps those who made the complaint to the police should have a look at themselves, as it seems that it is they who have the sectarian problem.

"This gesture is one which is made by sportsmen and women all over the world, but bizarrely it only seems to cause offence here in Scotland." Boruc is not the first footballer in Scotland to have caused controversy by making the sign of the cross.

In 1999 Rangers fans complained after Celtic's former Croatian striker Mark Viduka blessed himself during an Old firm game.

Rod McDonald of Partick Thistle received a caution for blessing himself in a match against Rangers in 1996.

The yellow-card led to him being sent off for two bookable offences.


dailymail.co.uk
 

fuzzylogix

Council Member
Apr 7, 2006
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RE: Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the c

Perhaps he was making the sign of the cross with his middle finger.
 

zoofer

Council Member
Dec 31, 2005
1,274
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Re: Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the c

Yeah ridiculous.

How yer doing Tracy?
:)
 

cairdinbhoypaddy

New Member
Aug 29, 2006
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RE: Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the c

Just to correct you on a few points, Celtic have never had a policy where they only signed Catholics. In actual fact, Celtic's greatest ever manager, the late Jock Stein (a protestant) led the side to European success in 1967 and is regarded as nothing short of a legend by the Celtic support. Stein himself played for Celtic in his younger days, and was by no means the first Protestant to play for the club.

No one at the club can actually say who the first protestant to play for celtic was, because it was not club policy to sign (or indeed not sign) players of a certain religion, or indeed to ask the religion of any player which they signed.

Celtic were formed in 1888 to provide hope for the poor catholic community who fled to scotland in the late 1870's and 80's, as they were persecuted by their protestant counterparts by living in severe poverty, with lack of essential food. Mortality was eccesively high amongst the catholic polulation and the club did remarkablee work to overcome this.

Rangers however had a strict policy of not signing a catholic, and under pressure from the European football governing body UEFA (they were threatned with being kicked out of European football) in 1989 they signed Maurice Johnstone. That for those not quite so good with maths, is 117 years existence without a catholic. Since such times, in Maurice's autobiography, he tals about not having his boots cleaned or his shirt left out by the kit-man and not being allowed to share the showers with the rest of the players because of his religion.

The Rangers support is still extremely Protestant based (as the Celtic support is predominantly catholic), however this ridiculous situation where a person is not allowed to make the sign of the cross wihout fear of having a criminal record is a discrace, and it has made Scotland the laughing-stock of the world.
 

Hotshot

Electoral Member
May 31, 2006
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RE: Footballer gets criminal record for making sign of the c

Er blackleaf, thats soccer. We play football in North America (oh yeah, we play soccer too)