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Muhammad Ali to be honoured with Muslim funeral service

ByReuters

Updated 09/06/2016 at 13:05 GMT

The world begins two final days of mourning for Muhammad Ali on Thursday when the boxing great will be honored with a Muslim funeral a day before receiving a final goodbye with an interfaith service.

Boxing fans tour the Ali Center as they pay their respect to Muhammad Ali, the former world heavyweight boxing champion after he died at the age of 74 on Friday at City Hall in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. June 4.

Image credit: Eurosport

Ali, one of the transcendent figures of the 20th Century for his boxing prowess, showmanship and opposition to the Vietnam War in the turbulent 1960s and '70s, died last Friday of septic shock in an Arizona hospital. He was 74.
Some 15,000 people are expected at the jenazah, the Arabic word for funeral, set for noon (1600 GMT) at Freedom Hall in Ali's home town of Louisville, Kentucky, the venue where Ali defeated Willi Besmanoff on Nov. 29, 1961.
Imam Zaid Shakir, co-founder of Zaytuna College in Berkeley, California, will lead the service.
Ali and his family planned his funeral for 10 years, making sure it would honor his Muslim faith.
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Boxing great Muhammad Ali (R) shakes hands with heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis during a CFL halftime charity event for the Parkinson Society of Canada in Toronto, October 20, 2002.

Image credit: Eurosport

Ali's braggadocio startled white America even when he went by his birth name, Cassius Clay. He further shocked U.S. society after he joined the Nation of Islam and changed his name in 1964.
In the 1970s, Ali converted to Sunni Islam, the largest denomination among Muslims worldwide. Late in life he embraced Sufism, a mystical school of the faith.
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Muhammad Ali's body flown to Louisville

He was admired worldwide, and gave U.S. Muslims a hero they could share with the American mainstream.
"To be properly prepared for burial, prayed over and then buried is a right owed to every single Muslim," Shakir said in a statement issued by the Ali family spokesman. "If no one fulfills those rights, then the entire community has fallen into sin. In the case of someone of Muhammad Ali's stature, to leave any of those rights unfulfilled would be a crime."
On Friday, the final service at the KFC Yum! Center will take place with luminaries such as former US President Bill Clinton, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and comedian Billy Crystal.
Actor Will Smith, who portrayed Ali in a 2001 biographical film, and former heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis will be among the pallbearers.
On Wednesday, the city of Louisville held a celebration called the "I Am Ali" Festival. The day-long event highlighted Ali's life through stories, music, dance and arts and crafts that had children coloring butterfly and bee masks in an homage to the boxer's famous quote about his fighting style, "Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee."
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