Muhammad Ali's hometown of Louisville will honour the former boxing champion on Friday with a procession through the Kentucky city and public funeral at a sports arena, a tribute befitting a local hero who achieved global stature as a humanitarian.
The public service for Ali, one of the most celebrated figures
of the 20th century whose death brought accolades from around the world,
will feature eulogies by former President Bill Clinton, broadcaster
Bryant Gumbel and comedian Billy Crystal, family spokesman Bob Gunnell
said on Saturday.
A worldwide audience of "billions" are expected to watched in
what is being described as one of the biggest events in television
history.
The body of the former prize fighter, who died in Arizona from
"septic shock due to unspecified natural causes", after suffering for
decades from Parkinson's syndrome, was expected to be returned within
the next two days to Louisville, where flags were lowered at city hall
in his honor.
Ali was born Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr in Louisville on Jan. 17,
1942, and was known as the "Louisville Lip" early in his boxing career
because of his playfully boastful nature.
Friday's events were expected to begin with a private prayer service for family members at a Louisville funeral home.
The procession will then proceed along the city's main streets,
including Muhammad Ali Boulevard, to Cave Hill Cemetery, passing
locations that were significant to the former champion.
Ali was admitted on Monday to a Phoenix-area hospital and died
Friday night of septic shock due to unspecified natural causes, Gunnell
said.
In his prime Ali spoke out against racism, war and religious
intolerance, while projecting a brash confidence and sense of pride that
became a model for African-Americans during 1960's and 1970's.
Stripped of his world boxing crown for refusing to join the U.S.
Army and fight in Vietnam, Ali returned in triumph by recapturing the
title and starring in some of the sport's most unforgettable bouts.
In later years, Ali was admired for his grace in coping with a disease and as an ambassador for humanitarian causes.
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