Makes me think of the possibilities of a sports tournament in the USA  
involving Notre Dame, BYU, Baylor, Brandeis ( nominally Jewish ), and maybe 
even 
 Naropa of Boulder, Colorado, although it is small by college standards and 
 presently has no sports program that I am aware of. But the idea of 
Tibetan  monks cheering on a Buddhist basketball team, say,  has a certain 
charm 
to  it. Only thing to add might be some avowedly Atheist university to make 
sure  that intercollegiate debates are animated and exciting and so that 
football  games end with the deaths of the losers. 
Just a suggestion 
Billy  
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China's believers compete in first religious  games
(Reuters, June 23, 2010) 
Beijing, China - China's first "Religious Games" took place in the  
southwestern province of Yunnan this week, allowing Buddhist monks and Taoist  
nuns 
to compete with Muslims, Catholics and Protestants in a series of sporting  
events, local media reported. 
The Games, held from June 20-22, saw nearly 1,000 participants from the 
five  faiths battle it out at athletics, table tennis, badminton, basketball, 
chess,  rope skipping and even tug of war, according to state news agency 
Xinhua. 
The 21 participating teams were not always divided on religious lines, with 
 Buddhists, Taoists and Muslims often on the same side, the Yunnan 
Information  News said. 
"We have never trained for this. We are not here to win, but to 
participate,"  the paper quoted a Buddhist nun as saying after she had lost a 
badminton 
match  2-0 to a Muslim woman. 
China, officially atheist, has been accused by human rights groups of  
heavy-handed treatment toward religious minorities, like the Muslim Uighurs and 
 
Buddhist Tibetans in the northwest. 
Pictures from the games showed a team of Buddhist monks at a basketball 
game  wearing running shoes, with their traditional orange robes cut short, as 
well as  a number of Tibetan lamas cheering on a colleague during a 
long-distance  run. 
"The participants are religious practitioners, students from religious  
institutions and normal religious people," said organizer Xiong Shengxiang,  
chief of religious administration of the provincial government. 
"The Games aim to increase exchanges among the religions." 
Yunnan is one of the most ethnically and religiously diverse provinces in  
China. Around 10 percent of Yunnan's population of 45 million belong to one 
of  the five major faiths.
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