Muhammad Ali’s body arrives in Louisville ahead of Friday’s public funeral

His casket is seen being loaded into a hearse at Louisville International Airport
His casket is seen being loaded into a hearse at Louisville International Airport

Muhammad Ali’s body has arrived in his hometown of Louisville – where he’ll be laid to rest as the city grieves the loss of its favorite son.

An airplane carrying the boxing great’s body arrived from Arizona, where he died, on Sunday afternoon ahead of a public funeral procession and service expected to draw huge crowds in honor of ‘The Greatest’ on Friday.

The private plane landed at Louisville International Airport around 4.30pm, WLKY reports. Family spokesman Bob Gunnell says Ali was accompanied by his wife, Lonnie, and other family members and friends. He says the body was taken to a local funeral home.

Police reportedly escorted the casket, which was wrapped in a black cloth bearing Arabic scripture in gold on it, from the airport to the funeral home.

The three-time heavyweight champion and outspoken civil rights activist died on Friday night at age 74 after health problems complicated by a long battle with Parkinson’s disease.

‘Our hearts are literally hurting. But we are happy daddy is free now,’ one of Ali’s nine children, daughter Hana, wrote on Twitter.

The official cause of Ali’s death was septic shock due to unspecified natural causes.

Family spokesman Bob Gunnell said Ali had sought medical attention for a cough, but his condition rapidly deteriorated. He was admitted to a hospital in the Phoenix suburb of Scottsdale, where he had lived for several years with his wife Lonnie.

Ali’s family ultimately removed him from life support on Friday, Gunnell said.

‘We all tried to stay strong and whispered in his ear, ‘You can go now. We will be okay,” Hana Ali wrote.

In Louisville, the late boxing legend’s life was celebrated at a memorial service at the church where their father was a longtime member on Sunday.

His younger brother 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.

During the service, assistant pastor Charles Elliott III asked the congregation to stand to honor Muhammad Ali. In his tribute, Elliott said ‘there is no great man that has done more for this city than Muhammad Ali.’

Source: Dailymail.co.uk

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