Emotional farewell to Muhammad Ali in Louisville
Thousands of people from the worlds of sports, entertainment,
politics and Muhammad Ali's native Louisville bid farewell Friday to the
boxing legend eulogized by Bill Clinton as a "universal soldier for our
common humanity."
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Flowers pile up on the
hearse carrying Muhammad Ali spectators watch his funeral
procession enter Cave Hill Cemetery, Friday, June 10 in
Louisville. |
A poignant memorial service, which began with a Koranic chant, capped
two days of tributes honoring the three-time heavyweight world champion
known as "The Greatest," who died last week at 74 after a long battle
with Parkinson's disease.
Early Friday, thousands lined the streets of Louisville -- the
largest city in the southern state of Kentucky where Ali was born and
launched his career -- to catch a glimpse of the hearse carrying his
remains, before a private family burial. Then former president Clinton,
comedian Billy Crystal, Ali's wife Lonnie and others addressed mourners
gathered at a Louisville arena -- remembrances that lauded his athletic
gifts, his passionate civil rights activism and his quick wit.
"We all have an Ali story. It's the gift we all have that should be
most honored today," Clinton said.
"Besides being a lot of fun to be around and basically a universal
soldier for our common humanity, I will always think of Muhammad as a
truly free man of faith."
Crystal, who brought some levity to the proceedings with comic
impressions and a few well-received jokes, called Ali "a tremendous bolt
of lightning created by Mother Nature, the fantastic combination of
power and beauty."
Mourners chanted Ali's name as Lonnie took the stage, her face
obscured by her wide-brimmed black hat.
She reminded the crowd: "If Muhammad did not like the rules, he would
rewrite them. His religion, his name, his beliefs, were his to fashion,
no matter what the cost." Born Cassius Clay in 1942, Ali won Olympic
gold and went on to a glorious professional career, with his epic fights
-- like the "Rumble in the Jungle" with George Foreman and the "Thrilla
in Manila" with Joe Frazier -- now the stuff of sports legend.
He shocked America by refusing to serve in Vietnam, a decision that
cost him his title and his career for years. He earned scorn for his
incendiary comments about his opponents, once calling Frazier a
"gorilla."
But Ali later earned global respect as a civil rights activist who
preached religious tolerance, and for his public battle with a disease
that ravaged his once powerful body.
Earlier, fans along the funeral procession route, stretching about 18
miles (30 kilometers), were in a festive mood -- taking photos,
cheering, applauding and chanting Ali's name in the bright sunshine.
Some even wore boxing gloves in the heat.
The cortege passed by Ali's childhood home, the Ali Center, the
Center for African American Heritage -- which focuses on the lives of
blacks in Kentucky -- and along Muhammad Ali Boulevard before arriving
at his final resting place, Cave Hill Cemetery.
Spectators threw red roses and other flowers onto the hearse,
blocking much of its windshield by the time it reached its destination.
A fleet of limousines transporting Ali's family and close friends
followed.
"The kids love him, he's always stood for hope in this neighborhood,"
Toya Johnson told AFP outside his boyhood home.
"For the youth here, he is an example."
Actor Will Smith -- who earned an Oscar nomination for his portrayal
of Ali on the silver screen -- and former heavyweight champions Mike
Tyson and Lennox Lewis served as pallbearers.
The interfaith memorial service led by an imam began in the
mid-afternoon at a huge sports arena, bringing together VIPs and fans
alike -- more than 15,000 people in all.
"Muhammad Ali was the heart of this city -- the living, breathing
embodiment of the greatest that we can be," said rabbi Joe Rapport, one
of several representatives of diverse faiths asked to speak, echoing
Ali's message of tolerance.
Barack Obama was not present at the funeral of the man he calls a
"personal hero" since it coincided with his daughter Malia's graduation
from high school.
The president's senior aide Valerie Jarrett, reading a message from
Obama and wife Michelle at the service, said: "Muhammad Ali was America.
Muhammad Ali will always be America."
"This week we lost an icon," Obama said Thursday in a video message
honoring The Champ. "A person who for African Americans, I think,
liberated their minds in recognizing that they could be proud of who
they were.""I grew up watching him. I grew up having my identity shaped
by what he accomplished," he said.
On Thursday, thousands came together for an Islamic prayer service in
remembrance of the champion, who converted to Islam in 1964, changing
his name to Muhammad Ali.
(AFP)
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