Arab Times

Ali’s hometown joins together in prayer & celebratio­n

Politician­s, celebs, fans expected for Friday memorial service Obituary

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LOUISVILLE, Ky, June 6, (AP): Muhammad Ali’s younger brother wept, swayed to hymns and hugged anyone he could reach. He raised his hands to the sky, eyes closed, surrounded by congregant­s at the church where their father once worshipped.

Rahaman Ali took center stage at the two-hour service at King Solomon Missionary Baptist Church, sitting in a front-row pew with his wife, Caroline. The church is not far from the little pink house in Louisville’s west end where the Ali brothers grew up.

It was one of several emotional remembranc­es Sunday as the city joined together to mourn its most celebrated son, the Louisville Lip. Later this week, politician­s, celebritie­s and fans from around the globe are expected for a Friday memorial service that Ali planned himself with the intent of making it open to all.

An airplane carrying the boxing great’s body landed in his grieving hometown Sunday afternoon.

At services all over town, they recited Ali’s words on religion: “Rivers, lakes, ponds, streams, oceans all have different names, but they all contain water,” Ali once said. “So do religions have different names, and they all contain truth.”

At a Sunday evening memorial at the Louisville Islamic Center, speakers from many faiths — Muslims, Christians, Catholics, Jews — lamented that Ali’s death came at a time when political rhetoric is getting more divisive.

They did not mention Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump by name, but the reasons for the theme were clear. The Republican presidenti­al candidate said he would temporaril­y ban all Muslims from entering the United States, a propositio­n Ali used one of his last public statements to rebuke.

“When the clamor of the disaffecte­d targets those considered other we need someone to cry out that people are not born other — we make them other, through our fear, through our prejudice, our hatred, our desire to grasp for more than is rightfully ours,” said Rev Derek Penwell, who leads a Christian church in Louisville. “We need a voice who knows that true power is to help us to see that our determinat­ion to love in spite of our fear is the greatest expression of power that human beings can muster.”

Ali famously converted to the Islamic faith and refused to fight in the Vietnam War, though it cost him years of his boxing career. He insisted throughout his life that people of all faiths and colors should come together in peace, and the speakers at the Islamic Center pondered whether anyone else has the strength or statute to In this October 4, 1986 photo, world heavyweigh­t champion Muhammad Ali holds a painted papyrus with his portrait and the testament of Islamic faith in Arabic that reads, ‘There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah,’ that was presented to him by an art student, at the Marriott Hotel in

Cairo, Egypt. (AP)

take on the fight.

Even after his conversion, Ali sometimes attended King Solomon Missionary Baptist Church. Ali’s father, Cassius Clay Sr, a painter, was an active member of the congregati­on before his death decades ago. He painted a mural of Jesus’

baptism that still hangs behind the pulpit.

“There is no greater man that has done more for this city than Muhammad Ali,” the church’s assistant pastor, Charles Elliott III, said Sunday morning, drawing a round of “amens” and prolonged applause from the congregati­on.

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