Class Xi - Pt-Ii-Set 1 Final
Class Xi - Pt-Ii-Set 1 Final
Class Xi - Pt-Ii-Set 1 Final
General Instructions:
(1) Spirituality seldom dribbled with soccer, until the ‘Hand of God’ came into play during the quarter final
match of the 1986 World Cup football between Argentina and England. Diego Maradona claimed that divine
intervention had helped him score the controversial goal.
(2) A short film made in 2003 by Mike Walker – Does God play football? – explored the relationship between
God and Tommy, a seven year old football fan. Tommy’s only desire is to have a father of his own to play
football with. In the absence of a real Dad, he adopts God as his father with the help of a local priest – very
likely how the human soul longs for communion with the Universal spirit.
(3) An individual remains unfit for spiritual journey without the requisite physical and mental strength.
Vivekananda said: “You will be nearer to Heaven through football than through the study of Bhagavad
Gita”. A player’s patience and perseverance is tested on the football field at every moment; the ability to
wriggle out of tough situations and hold on to one’s nerves in tight situations. A seeker, too, has to undergo
such trials during the inward game of realization.
(4) Look at football as a metaphor for life. The ball is the individual’s ego. Team members are family and
friends; trust in teammates is the foundation of a good relationship and helps the player win the match of
happiness. The opposition players are obstacles like anger, pride, hatred, that must be overcome to reach the
goalpost. The goalpost is the universal consciousness to which a person must ultimately submit the ego, to
achieve true bliss. The coach is the guru who teaches the way and the player learns from his mistakes on the
field. The referee is the law of karma that reinforces the correct rules for playing. The audience is society
that reacts to performance on the field. As in life, a game that has started must end. As long as a person is in
the game, one gets the illusion of limited time and space. Only when the game gets over, does one realize the
limitlessness of time and space.
(5) Every player is assigned a particular role on the field according to his skills – forward, midfielder, defender,
or goalkeeper. Similarly, in life we have designated roles. Our capabilities and choices determine the
contribution we make to the world through our work. Like a player who can manoeuvre the ball on the field,
a person has the free will to choose his thoughts, words and actions. Football is meditation ‘on the run’. A
player is always ‘in the moment’ for the entire duration of the play. The player has no thought of past and no
use for future, as all the scoring opportunities are created in the ‘now’.
(6) Football teaches one to be a good spectator, one who watches the game with passionate detachment. For him,
an exciting football match is only that – a game. Wins or losses, even for his favourite team, do not bother
him. A good spectator is like a joyful observer of life; he witnesses events around him as they come and go,
and remains detached as he is always centered in truth.
(7) Today, football is a faith binding a legion of followers across the world. People, irrespective of their
religions, nationalities and cultures, are tuning in simultaneously to watch live football. If this is not
universal brotherhood, what else is?
(1.1) On the basis of your reading of the passage, answer the following questions. (12=2)
i. What was the claim made by Diego Maradona when he played for 1986 quarter-final match of the World Cup?
ii. How is football meditation ‘on the run’?
(1.2) On the basis of your reading of the passage, answer any 3 of the following questions. (23=6)
i. What are the similarities between playing the football game and playing the designated role in life?
ii. What is the theme of the short movie ‘Does God play football’?
iii. How can we get near to the Almighty by playing football? What are Vivekanand’s views regarding this?
iv. How does football symbolize life?
(1.3) Find words in the passage which mean the same as the following. (12=2)
i. a figment of imagination (Para 4)
ii. a planned and controlled movement or series of moves (Para 5)
2. As the Head Boy of your school, write a letter to the Principal requesting him to make internet facilities available to
the students in the library. (6)