Thousands of fans, dignitaries and faithful from across the globe filled a Kentucky arena Thursday to honor Muhammad Ali at a traditional Muslim prayer service where he was remembered as a global icon who used his celebrity to promote unity among faiths, races and nations.
The service, known as Jenazah, began two days of remembrances for the boxing legend, who died Friday at age 74. Ali designed his final memorials himself years before he died, and intended them to be in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, and open to all.
“He was a gift to his people, his religion, his country, and ultimately, to the world. Ali was an unapologetic fighter for the cause of black people in America,” said Sherman Jackson, a leading Muslim scholar who spoke at the service. “Ali was the people’s champion, and champion he did the cause of his people.”

Muhammad Ali’s casket is escorted by pallbearers for his Jenazah, a traditional Islamic Muslim service, in Freedom Hall, Thursday, June 9, 2016, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
More than 14,000 got tickets for the Thursday service, and millions more were able to watch by live stream. Tickets for Friday’s memorial were gone within an hour. Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, boxing promoter Don King and Louis Farrakhan, head of the Nation of Islam, were among the high-profile guests in attendance Thursday.
Ali joined the Nation of Islam, the black separatist religious movement, in the 1960s, but left after a decade to embrace mainstream Islam, which emphasizes an embrace of all races and ethnicities.
The attendees at the service were young and old; black and white; Muslims, Christians and Jews. Some wore traditional Islamic clothing, others blue jeans or business suits. Outside the arena, the term “Jenazah” trended on Twitter as the service started and the world began to watch.
“We welcome the Muslims, we welcome the members of other faith communities, we welcome the law enforcement community,” Imam Zaid Shakir, a prominent U.S. Muslim scholar, told the crowd. “We welcome our sisters, our elders, our youngsters.”
“All were beloved to Muhammad Ali.”
The service lasted less than an hour and included prayers and several speakers, including two Muslim women, who described Ali’s impact on their own lives, on the world’s acceptance of the Islamic faith and as a champion for civil rights.
Mustafa Abdush-Shakur leaned on his cane as he limped into the arena. He came 800 miles from Connecticut despite a recent knee replacement that makes it excruciating to walk.
“This is a physical pain,” he said. “But had I not been able to come and pray for my brother, it would have caused me a spiritual pain and that would have been much deeper.”
A fellow Muslim who shares the boxing great’s name arrived in Kentucky with no hotel reservation, just a belief that his 8,000-mile pilgrimage was important to say goodbye to a person considered a hero of his faith.

Safih Amed, left speaks with former boxing champion Sugar Ray Leonard before Muhammad Ali’s Jenazah, a traditional Islamic Muslim service, in Freedom Hall, Thursday, June 9, 2016, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
Mohammad Ali met the boxer in the early 1970s and they struck up a friendship based on their shared name. The Champ visited his home in 1978 and always joked he was his twin brother, he said. He stood weeping at the funeral, a green Bangladeshi flag draped over his shoulder, holding snapshots he took of the boxer during his visit, one standing with his family, another of him sprawled on a bed in his home.
The service began with four recitations of “Allahu Akbar” or “God is Great,” with silent prayers between of a reading from the first chapter of the Quran, a blessing for Abraham, a general prayer for the well-being and forgiveness of the deceased for the next life and a prayer for everyone at the funeral.
The memorials are taking place after a burst of assaults on U.S. mosques and Muslims following the Islamic extremist attacks last year in Paris and San Bernardino, California, and anti-Muslim rhetoric in the presidential election.
Organizers of Ali’s memorials say the events are not meant to be political. Still, many Muslim leaders say they are glad for the chance to highlight positive aspects of the religion through the example of Ali, one of the most famous people on the planet. The global nature of the service — and because it was streamed — offered a window into a religion many outsiders know little about.
“In this climate we live in today, with Islamophobia being on the rise and a lot of hate-mongering going on, I think it’s amazing that someone of that caliber can unify the country and really show the world what Islam is about,” said 25-year-old Abdul Rafay Basheer, who traveled from Chicago. “I think he was sort of the perfect person to do that.”

Muhammad Ali’s wife Lonnie and her daughter Laila attend Muhammad Ali’s Jenazah, a traditional Islamic Muslim service, in Freedom Hall, Thursday, June 9, 2016, in Louisville, Ky. Laila is holding her daughter Sydney Jurldine Conway. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
Muslims typically bury their dead within 24 hours, but the timeline is not a strict obligation, and accommodations are often made, either to follow local customs or, in the case of a public figure like Ali, provide time for dignitaries and others to travel. Ali died in Arizona and time was needed to transport his body to Louisville, said Timothy Gianotti, an Islamic scholar at the University of Waterloo in Canada.
Gianotti said by phone that he and three others — two Phoenix-area Muslims and Imam Zaid Shakir, a prominent U.S. Muslim scholar who will lead Thursday’s prayers — washed, anointed and wrapped Ali’s body within a day of his death. The body is typically wrapped in three pieces of simple fabric.
“Muhammad planned all of this,” Shakir said. “And he planned for it to be a teaching moment.”
The Associated Press contributed to this article.
No use for draft dodger & racists !.
I wonder If Castro let Stephenson fight professionally, or if the Russians let Vyosotsky fight professionally in the late 1960’s into the 1970’s, if Ali would just have been known as a good boxer from Louisville?
A MAN THAT REFUSE TO HONOR AND SERVE HIS COUNTRY.
*****IS NOT A MAN..***** THAT IS A COWARD**********
SORRY ALI OR WHAT EVER YOUR NAME WAS.
******YOU ARE NOT A AMERICAN HERO.**************
THAT BELONG TO ALL THE AFRICAN AMERICANS THAT DIE IN VIET NAN
something that you did not do. or have the balls to do it. COWARD..
more that 5.000 African Americans die there THOSE SOLDIERS ARE
***************REAL AMERICAN HERO********** not you….
this is my opinion, and i am not Black.
I met Muhammad Ali in 1974 at the Hilton Inn on the Mobile Bay Causeway in 1974. The company I was working for at the time was having their annual Christmas party there. Our sales manager left the party and went to the bar for a drink where he met Muhammad. He invited him to our party and he graciously came and circulated among the people attending. I was impressed by his humbleness.
I grieve at his passing because he was a Muslim. Biblically a man that has not accepted Jesus of Nazareth’s death on the cross as payment for his sins and given Jesus Lordship over his life does not achieve eternal life in heaven, but eternal damnation in the Lake of Fire.
When a religious man asked Jesus what he must do to be saved his response was “You must be born again” that is accept Jesus as the Son of God who died to pay the price for the man’s sin.
Hopefully Muhammad Ali made that choice. Ultimately he, as each of us, will be judged by whether or not he had before his passing. Only the Trinity knows for certain if a man is Born Again.
If you have never made that choice it important to do it since today might be the last chance you will have the opportunity to do it. Failure to do it has severe consequences.
I, for one, change the channel everytime the lame street media covers this thugs Muslim funeral.
Great Americans are not, and never were, draft dodgers. (which ‘Slick Willie’ Clinton was one of)
Since Casius Clay, (AKA Muhammad Ali) was ashamed of his country and refused to support it, IMHO, he deserves no respect OR news coverage.
Had to served, no doubt he would have NEVER seen combat, but would have been in one of the Military Services ‘Special Entertainment Units, and to me that negates his ‘conciensious objector’ claims.
He wasn’t a draft dodger. He didn’t run up to Canada. He was willing to go to jail for his beliefs.
He was one of the first to see how stupid that war was.
Bruce; I may be the first to see how stupid you are. And Men died in WW11 so you can make stupid remarks like that.
I, too, turned off all channels that was showing the Draft dodging Muslim’s Funerals.
Bruce, I may be the first to see how Stupid you are. The man was a draft dodging Muslim. I, too, turned off all Channels showing the Funeral Services.