Ali laid to rest after final journey through hometown

Wednesday 15th June 2016 07:00 EDT
 
 

Eulogies from his widow, children and lifelong friends followed messages from religious leaders of varied backgrounds at the memorial service for Muhammad Ali, who was remembered more as the man than the boxing champion.

The service in his hometown of Louisville capped a daylong final homecoming for Ali, who died at the age of 74 a week ago. Earlier in the day, a roughly two-hour funeral procession took his body past places where the legendary boxer spent his formative years: his childhood home, his high school, the first boxing gym where he trained.

The Greatest of All Time was then laid to rest early in the afternoon in a private ceremony at Cave Hill Cemetery. Actor Will Smith, who played the title role in the 2001 film “Ali,” and former heavyweight champions Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson were among eight pallbearers, according to organizers.

The burial was the only private portion of three days of events celebrating Ali that began with a festival and Islamic prayer program. It was just how Ali wanted the funeral plans to be when he laid them out several years back - as open as possible so his fans could say goodbye.

Friday afternoon’s memorial was the main public celebration, held at the 22,000-seat KFC Yum! Center in Louisville. Ali’s widow, Lonnie, spoke eloquently about the inspiration of his legacy. Two of Ali’s children also spoke.

At the memorial service, eulogies also came from University of Louisville student Natasha Mundkur and family friend John Ramsey.

Malcolm X’s eldest daughter, Attallah Shabazz, came close to tears recalling the man who was the last close connection to her father. Shabazz said her father loved Ali as “a little brother, 16 years his junior,” and as a trusted friend.

With his remarks coming at the end of the nearly three-hour service — which was already delayed for nearly an hour — bewhiskered comedian Billy Crystal joked that he was clean-shaven when it all started.

Closing out the memorial service was former President Bill Clinton, who paid homage to Ali’s sense of humor right off the bat: “I can just hear Muhammad saying now, ‘Well, I thought I should be eulogized by at least one president, and by making you last in a long, long line, I guaranteed you a standing ovation.”

Ali was able to rise above his affliction with Parkinson’s Disease by being a man of both wisdom and faith, Clinton said.

The memorial service embraced many religious faiths, including an opening reading from the Quran by scholar and the family’s religious adviser, Imam Shakir. A Protestant minister, two rabbis, a representative from the Catholic Church, a representative from the Buddhist religion and Sen. Orrin Hatch (representing the Mormon faith) also spoke.


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