By now you have probably heard that Pla will play. Pla, as in
Caroline Pla from Bucks County; play, as in play football.
The only
question that remains: How did an 11-year-old girl make the unbendable Archdiocese of Philadelphia bend?
Before we get to the answer to that question, I should remind you that Caroline Pla is great at football,
a monster on defense.
So you won’t be surprised that it was someone
from an opposing team in the Doylestown CYO league who complained.
A
quick check of the rule book found that no girls were allowed.
This infuriated Pla’s family, and they set up a petition on
Change.org. Last check it had over 108,000 signatures.
The petition led
to national media attention, with coverage on CNN and Good Morning America and an appearance on Ellen DeGeneres’ show; Ellen praised Caroline and pledged support.
Caroline also wrote an email to the head of the Philadelphia
Archdiocese pleading her case.
Archbishop Chaput chastised her for going
to the media.
“I’m perplexed that you would contact me last, after
publicizing your situation in both the national and regional media …
that kind of approach has no effect on my decision making.”
I guess the
Archbishop is not an Ellen fan.
It does seem curious, after two decades of scandal in the Catholic
Church, and an uncovered cover-up in Philadelphia, that any official
with the Archdiocese would suggest a child not be a tattletale.
The Archbishop put together a panel of advisors to study the Pla
case, and the rule that bans her from playing in the Catholic Youth
Organization football league.
An insider told Daily News
columnist Ronnie Polaneczky that the advisors overwhelmingly wanted CYO
football to be boys only.
When someone on the panel mentioned that
other youth football leagues, including Pop Warner, allow girls, there
was group indignation.
The insider told Polaneczky, “It was like, ‘We’re
the Catholic Church. We don’t give in to pressure from society!’”
From the Archbishop’s email and the panel’s recommendation, it seemed
Pla would never play CYO football again.
But then a miracle happened.
The Archbishop ignored the panel’s recommendation and ruled that
Caroline and other girls could play.
I don’t think it was just a coincidence that the ruling came just
after the church installed a new Pope, a Vatican outsider, a
media-friendly reformer, who has already hinted at elevating the role of
women in the Church.
Pope Francis certainly wasn’t involved in the Pla case, but it is
easy to see how his election could have inspired Chaput’s apparent
change of heart.
Had a Vatican hardliner been selected by the Cardinals,
the Archbishop likely would have taken a harder line himself.
The new
Pope of the People would want Caroline to play.
Francis will be the preeminent figure in the reformation of the
Catholic Church.
But don’t forget the girl in Bucks County who just
wanted to play football. She symbolizes greater changes to come.