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  Thousands expected at Muhammad Ali’s prayer services

Thousands expected at Muhammad Ali’s prayer services

AFP
Published : Jun 9, 2016, 11:20 pm IST
Updated : Jun 9, 2016, 11:20 pm IST

Thousands of people are expected to attend an Islamic prayer service for Muhammad Ali on Thursday, the start of two days of poignant ceremonies honouring the late boxing legend.

Thousands of people are expected to attend an Islamic prayer service for Muhammad Ali on Thursday, the start of two days of poignant ceremonies honouring the late boxing legend.

Ali’s hometown of Louisville in the southern US state of Kentucky will host the tributes that will bring together VIPs and huge crowds of ordinary fans in the city of 600,000.

Ali, a three-time heavyweight world champion whose remarkable boxing career and civil rights activism made him one of the indelible figures of the 20th century, died last week at age 74 after a decades-long battle with Parkinson’s disease.

Born Cassius Clay at a time of racial segregation in the American south, the boxer converted to Islam in 1964, changing his name to Muhammad Ali.

The 30-minute prayer service will be held at Louisville’s Freedom Hall arena, the site of Ali’s last fight in his hometown, where he defeated Willi Besmanoff on November 29, 1961.

“The service is a traditional Muslim funeral,” said Imam Zaid Shakir, who helped organise it.

‘Live his legacy’ “Muhammad Ali has a very very special significance for the Muslim community,” he said.

“This is about... Sending him off in the very best of fashion, and honour his memory, live his legacy and love each other as he would wish.”

For millions of Muslims around the world, Ali symbolised the true face of Islam, promoting peace and tolerance.

Thousands are expected to attend the service.

On Friday morning, a funeral procession will wind through Louisville, passing sites that were important to Ali: his childhood home, the Ali Center, the Center for African American Heritage — which focuses on the lives of blacks in Kentucky — and, of course, along Muhammad Ali Boulevard before arriving at the cemetery.

Location: United States, Kentucky, Louisville