Greek priest right at home with rabid soccer fans

Greek priest right at home with rabid soccer fans

Published Aug. 4, 2010 4:33 a.m. ET

Many soccer fans follow the sport religiously, and Father Christos Mitsios is no exception.

The 51-year-old Greek Orthodox priest has become a mainstay in the hardcore section at PAOK Thessaloniki matches, cheering on the team and offering help and guidance to many of Greece's most fervent supporters in the fearsome Gate 4 section of the Toumba Stadium.

''Gate 4 is magnificent. These boys have a fire inside them, in their heart and soul,'' Father Christos told The Associated Press in an interview. ''I will always stay with the drug addicts, the hooligans, and those abandoned by society and their own families.

''It's the abandoned who often have more principles and more heart than those that appear respectable.''

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Father Christos does not go unnoticed at matches in the northern Greek city, where he went to theology school years ago. His flowing gray beard and full-length black cassock set him apart from the bare-chested thugs who attend every home match, but it is with them that Father Christos says he can do the most good.

Out of his modest Thessaloniki church, Father Christos runs a food bank and has attracted hundreds of troubled youths to church confession, while helping others join state-run drug programs.

''They are the people who work for minimum wage, and do what they can to get a ticket for the weekend match,'' Father Christos said. ''They are the first to join demonstrations and they would be the first to fight when their country needs them, while the children of the (rich) study at university abroad.''

The church's conservative hierarchy is less than amused with Father Christos and the images of him, all smiles, being carried on the shoulders of boisterous youths, or chanting slogans with a black-and-white scarf tied around his neck.

Church elders stripped Father Christos of his administrative responsibilities, angry at his blunt refusal to stop attending matches. But a campaign with 18,000 followers launched on the social media site Facebook last year helped ensure that his punishment stopped there.

Fans routinely post clips of ''Papa-PAOK,'' as he is known to the club's faithful, on YouTube, one showing the bespectacled priest holding up a flare and chanting ''PAOK I live and breathe only for you.'' Others show his car being stopped in the street by supporters who erupt in spontaneous chants of admiration.

Father Christos said he's happy with all the attention if it means he can help kids who would otherwise ignore the church.

''The other day about 20 motorcycles pulled up to my church, and they were all fans seeking confession,'' he said. ''I probably do between 1,000 and 1,500 confessions each month, and 80 percent of those who come are below the age of 30. I'll sit with them, give them food and drinks, and we'll discuss their problems until the morning.''

On Wednesday, PAOK will be playing in one of its most important matches ever, facing Ajax at home in the second leg of the third qualifying round for the Champions League. The Greek team held the four-time European champions to a 1-1 draw in Amsterdam in the first leg.

''I don't see why we shouldn't pull it off,'' Father Christos said. ''Look at all the big teams that got knocked out of the last World Cup.''

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