Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Facebook Helps Kick Convention to Honor a Soccer Fan



Facebook is an absurd, life-corroding disruption that encourages self-obsession and pettiness.  That being said, a miniscule measure of goodness resides in all evil (Yes, I know, this is unnecessarily harsh.  Just follow me for a moment.).

This week, Facebook triumphed by effectively trumpeting the wishes of a boy who no longer lived to vocalize his own passions and preferences.
“A church in western Germany has bowed to public pressure and allowed the parents of a soccer-mad nine-year old boy who died from a brain tumor to erect a gravestone with a ball logo after a Facebook campaign spawned more than 100,000 angry messages.

“The dispute between the boy's parents and their Catholic church made national headlines. Newspapers printed poignant pictures of the dying boy in hospital last Christmas with Juergen Klopp, coach of his favorite club Borussia Dortmund.

“Shortly before his death, Jens Pascal had told his mother he wanted a gravestone that reflected his passion - the club which won Germany's Bundesliga just days before he died in May.

“But the Church of Maria Heimsuchung in Dortmund refused to erect a stone engraved with the club's logo and a soccer ball on top, arguing that it did not conform to rules which ban non-Christian inscriptions and images.”

Generally, I dismiss technologies as homogenizing distractions that extract every gratifyingly unique and hushed human quality from unmindful users.

Generally, my hasty and brutal rejection of internet services and handheld devices is appropriate.

However, this tale is a welcome exception to my doom-and-gloom rule.  Indeed, this is an instance of one boy’s unspeakably touching hope to differentiate himself and his memory.  Among hundreds of standard grey headstones, Jens Pascal sought to spotlight his youthful, pure, and animated enjoyment of soccer.

Though his exact wish was not granted, the resulting compromise will hopefully appeal to the precious boy’s lingering spiritual presence:

“The church issued a statement late on Monday saying it had agreed to a compromise. The gravestone could be erected, but with the ball on the ground rather than on its top and that it would also bear a Christian symbol, probably a dove.”

As an outsider, I contend that the greatest misery of a young death is its many thieveries.  In particular, it robs an individual of the chance to thrust his own meticulously selected identity into this overfull world.  Though, before his death, the young Jens Pascal could not define himself with the painstaking precision of a man of eighty years, Facebook offered him the coveted opportunities to select the qualities and contents of his memory, and to make his cemetery presence a little more remarkable.

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