Buenos Aires, Argentina – Dear Soccer Club in Buenos Aires, the birthplace of Pope Francis, celebrates a mass dedicated to his most famous fan two days after his death on Wednesday night, Argentina still pays emotional tribute to the first Latin American Pontif.
Dozens of members of the San Lorenzo Club gathered to say goodbye to Pope Francis at Team Chapel in Argentina’s capital, Argentina, in Argentina’s capital, a wooden church where the club was established a century ago and where he was before George Mario Bergogoli.
Bergogli also participated in the match with his Italian immigrant father and a child with a child throughout his life, providing a monthly club membership fee till his death at the age of 6 on Monday. Bergogli also grew up too far from San Lorenzo Stadium.
“We are not saying goodbye to a fan or club of the club. Today, many of us have said goodbye to a friend,” Father Juan Pablo Sklippa said, who is equipped from the altar at the Pope’s portrait of the Memorial on Wednesday. “Francisco was really great, the best player on the field, the best player in the world who never believed in himself.”
In the San Lorenzo Club-1, Father Lorenzo Massa became the center of Bergogli’s image as a “Pope of the People” as part of an attempt to remove the criminal roads of children.
“When I read the story of San Lorenzo, everything came together for me,” Pablo Avalos, a fan of Mass, said that Francis had credited to inspire his love for the club. “San Lorenzo has a lot to do with Francis. It started with Massa Social Activities that rescued the children’s roads.”
Both in his city were praised for his humility, simplicity and informal, the dominant leader of the charismatic scholar and Roman Catholic Church in Rome.
In Buenos Aires, he rode on the bus, walked barefoot through the broad shanteatown of the city, and exchanged football banners with the parisians. In the Vatican, he avoided the fancy Velvet for a simple white cassak, people caught off-garde with Wiscracks and expressed solidarity with the world’s lower.
Despite his far travel and authentic schedule, Francis is associated with San Lorenzo-since he promised to watch TV in 1, to inform the club’s rise and fall through radio.
Those who are miraculous to support Francis’ Sathood Point, the party’s climatic rise soon after the Francis Pope became the 21st. The club became the Argentine champion month later and on the 21st, the Champions League won the first Copa Libertadors equivalent to South America.
San Lorenzo players and officials twice to thank Francis for his support.
“He is our father,” Gasilla Eaglesius, a member of the long club of the decade. “We’ll miss him so much.”
However, if Francis’s sinfulness brings the club to good fortune, his death matches a crisis in San Lorenzo.
On Monday, a hidden camera footage was leaked to the club’s president, Marcelo Morety, staffing his pockets with thousands of dollars that he was alleged to have received a player’s mother in exchange for signing his son’s team.
In the face of fraud allegations, Morti took leave of his post on Wednesday because the Argentine Football Association launched a disciplined investigation. Some San Lorenzo fans were praying for Pope Francis, others were protesting at the nearest club’s headquarters.
Meanwhile, San Lorenjo’s superstitious fans were more interested in other coincidence. Online message boards and social media groups were flooded with imagination on how Francis’ club membership number – 88,235 – his 88 year old and the exact time of his death in Buenos Aires, 2:35, or 7:35 AM Rome.