Sunday, June 5, 2016

Muhammad Ali's funeral 'open to everybody'


Muhammad Ali's funeral 'open to everybody'


The world is invited to the funeral of Muhammad Ali in his hometown on Friday where the boxing legend's life will be celebrated with a public funeral procession and memorial service, a family spokesman said.
Ali, a three-time world heavyweight champion and civil rights activist who was an iconic figure of the 20th century, died Friday aged 74 after health problems complicated by a long battle with Parkinson's disease.
The official cause of death was septic shock due to unspecified natural causes.
The dazzling fighter -- whose words, often delivered in catchy rhymes, were as devastating as his punches -- had been admitted to an Arizona hospital earlier in the week.
Political leaders, sports figures, celebrities and fans around the world paused to remember "The Greatest," whose career spanned three decades.
On Sunday, Ali's relatives will accompany his body from Scottsdale, Arizona to Louisville, his hometown in the southern state of Kentucky.
After a private family funeral on Thursday, Ali's coffin will be transported through the streets of Louisville on Friday, before a public memorial service at an arena, with former president Bill Clinton among celebrities expected to offer eulogies.
The procession has been organized to "allow anyone that is there from the world to say goodbye," family spokesman Bob Gunnell told reporters.
Louisville lowered flags to half-staff in his honor, as fans flocked to the boxer's modest childhood home, now a museum, to pay their respects.
"Our hearts are literally hurting. But we are happy daddy is free now," Ali's daughter Hana Ali wrote on Twitter.
- 'He did not suffer' -
President Barack Obama led tributes for Ali, issuing an unusually personal statement in which he said he keeps a pair of Ali's boxing gloves and a photo in his private study.
"Muhammad Ali was The Greatest. Period," Obama said.
"His fight outside the ring would cost him his title and his public standing. It would earn him enemies on the left and the right, make him reviled and nearly send him to jail. But Ali stood his ground," Obama said.
Obama later called Ali's widow Lonnie to offer condolences, the White House said.
In a possible preview of Bill Clinton's eulogy, he and his wife Hillary, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, said Ali was "a blend of beauty and grace, speed and strength that may never be matched again."
Ali was hospitalized in the Phoenix area early this week, but his condition quickly deteriorated.
"His final hours were spent with just immediate family," Gunnell said. "He did not suffer."
Ali had been living in the Phoenix area with Lonnie, his fourth wife whom he married in 1986. He was survived by nine children -- seven daughters and two sons.
The fighter himself planned much of the memorial events, Gunnell said.
The interfaith service is to be conducted at Louisville's KFC Yum! Center in accordance with "Muslim tradition" and in the presence of an imam.
Ali will be buried at Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, where he was born in 1942.
Outside the family home in Louisville and the hospital in Scottsdale, fans left flowers, letters and mementos.
"He just represents everything that was good about mankind and it's sad to see him go," said James Brice.
Fans also gathered in Los Angeles to snap photos and leave flowers at Ali's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Ali had been hospitalized multiple times in recent years.
His Parkinson's had limited his public speaking, but Ali continued to make appearances and statements via his entourage.
- 'The greatest of all times' -
Ali's career stretched from 1960 to 1981 and he retired with a record of 56-5, including such historic bouts as the "Rumble in the Jungle" against George Foreman.
Don King promoted that watershed bout in Kinshasa, Zaire, in 1974, in which Ali used his "Rope a Dope" strategy to best Foreman and become just the second fighter ever to regain the heavyweight world title.
"He hit me with a quick one-two, knocked me down to the canvas and my whole life changed," Foreman told CNN of the epic "Rumble."
"I was devastated," he said. "Little did I know I would make the best friend I ever had in my life."

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