Ballon d'Or adds Socrates award for players who tackle social issues
Soccer Football - The Ballon d'Or Awards - Theatre du Chatelet, Paris, France - November 29, 2021 General view of the trophy REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
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The Ballon d'Or organisers said on Wednesday they are adding
a humanitarian prize to this year's ceremony named for Socrates the elegant
Brazil midfielder, who also held a medical degree.
"The Socrates Prize will identify the best social
initiative by committed champions," said a statement from France Football
magazine, which awards the Ballon d'Or.
Those initiatives will include those promoting social
integration, protection of the environment or aid to groups who are
disadvantaged, threatened or victims of conflict.
France Football said they chose Socrates, who died in 2011
aged 57, because of his committment to a campaign he helped organise at his
club, Corinthians in Sao Paulo, while Brazil was under a military dictatorship
called "Corinthian Democracy".
While they were warned to stop interfering in political
affairs, the players escaped unpunished because of their high profile and
because they focused on introducing democracy only at their club, insisting
there was a vote on decisions on how the club was run.
The prize will be awarded by a jury that includes former
Brazil and Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Rai, who is Socrates' younger
brother, as well as representatives of France Football and leaders of the
Monaco-based Peace and Sport organisation.
"Socrates always believed in the power of sport to
mobilise and transform society to make it more equal," said Rai in a
statement. "He demonstrated this as a player through his fight for
the re-democratisation of Brazil.
"Eleven years after his death, he remains the symbol of
the champion committed to a more just world."


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