The Sunday Guardian

ICONIC BOXER DEMANDED EXEMPTION FROM VIETNAM WAR

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three-time world heavyweigh­t champion, who had battled Parkinson's disease for 32 years, was admitted to hospital with a respirator­y condition earlier in the week PA In 1966, Muhammad Ali, one of the biggest sportsmen in the world defied the US government by refusing to fight in the Vietnam War.

Ali had recently converted to Islam, joining Elijah Muhammad’s Nation of Islam, and subsequent­ly changed his name from Cassius Clay which he called his “slave” name. It was in the name of his religion that Ali claimed conscienti­ous objection. While he objected on religious grounds, Ali also brought up the continuing racial inequality in the US as reasons why he objected to the war. Of the many memorable quotes given by “the greatest” boxer, one particular­ly poignant one centres around this.

“Why should they ask me to put on a uniform and go 10,000 miles from home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people in Vietnam while so-called Negro people in Louisville are treated like dogs and denied simple human rights?,” he said. In a letter to US army personnel, which was auctioned last year by Heritage auctions, Ali claimed he should be “entitled to exemption on the grounds he was a minister of religion”.

In the six-page letter, he writes it is in “the best national interest and of justice to all concerned” that this matter be dealt with and he should be permitted to object.

“This petition is made to you in order to avoid injustice and unnecessar­y litigation in the courts,” he wrote.

The letter fell on deaf ears and he was convicted in 1967. He was also stripped of his world heavyweigh­t title, had his boxing license suspended, fined $10,000 and ordered to five years imprisonme­nt.

However, Ali never went to jail instead remaining on bail while he appealed. In 1970 he returned to boxing and in 1971 took on the Supreme Court and won. His conviction was overturned and three years later Ali regained his world heavyweigh­t title by beating George Foreman in the “rumble in the jungle” fight. There will never be a boxer like Muhammad Ali. He is a legend to eternity... THE INDEPENDEN­T

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