Muhammad Ali to be buried with a small piece of Canada

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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Muhammad Ali to be buried with a small piece of Canada



A Canadian family donated the burial shroud that Muhammad Ali will be buried in. It was just one part of the meticulous planning the boxing legend went through over the course of a decade in laying out how he wanted his funeral and burial to unfold.

Muhammad Ali to be buried with a small piece of Canada - World - CBC News
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Man, the Greatest just died... still too soon for Ali jokes.. really, he's not even cold yet.

We are all naked and equal at the beginnings and ends of our lives.

Chill.

You'll get there soon enough, yourself so relax.
 

gopher

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Jun 26, 2005
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wonderful tributes to Ali:


A Rabbi received a standing ovation for his powerful speech at Muhammad Ali's funeral - Business Insider



Rabbi Michael Lerner delivered a powerful eulogy for boxing legend Muhammad Ali at his funeral on Friday, praising Ali for daring “to love black people at a time when black people had a hard time loving themselves” and calling for an end to Islamophobia.

Thousands of friends, family, celebrities, and political figures attended Ali’s traditional Muslim memorial service in Louisville, Kentucky, which spanned more than two days. Ali died last week at the age of 74 from complications related to his Parkinson’s disease.

“Muhammad Ali had the courage to say no to Farrakhan and leave the anti-Semitism and homophobia of that part of Islam, and eventually to draw sustenance from the Sufi approach to Islam – the ultimate in a love-oriented religion,” Lerner said, according to a transcript of the eulogy provided to Israeli news outlet Haaretz in advance of the funeral.

Louis Farrakhan, Sr., is the leader of the religious group Nation of Islam, with which Ali became affiliated in the 1960s.

“If Muhammad Ali were here today, I’m sure his message would be this: Don’t waste your time on this planet fighting the small battles – put your life energies and money into fundamental systemic transformation,” said Lerner, who is also a political activist and editor of the Jewish magazine Tikkun.


image: https://static-ssl.businessinsider.com/image/57526f2752bcd0210c8c6ed4-2400/ap051109010127.jpg



Lerner said that what made Ali a hero was his courage to stand up to the “immoral” war in Vietnam by proclaiming himself a conscientious objector. Lerner was an anti-war activist along with Ali. Ali refused to serve in the US army and was immediately stripped of his heavyweight title in 1967.

“Knowing he would lose his title, knowing he would face the racism of American society that would be heaped upon him for saying no to the crazy war in Vietnam,” Ali said “no” to the war, Lerner said.

“He spoke truth to power – we must speak truth to power,” he added.

Twitter users were quick to react to Lerner’s speech. Some commented that Lerner’s speech was overly politicized, but the vast majority were positive, thanking Lerner for expressing solidarity with the Muslim community.






Lerner’s eulogy — and the entire memorial service — had a strong interfaith message.

To honor Ali, he said: “Tell the leaders of Turkey to stop bombing and murdering their Kurd minority. Tell the US to stop sending military supplies to Saudi Arabia, which is the sponsor of some of the most hate-filled teachings in the Islamic world and is one of the most repressive regimes on the face of the earth.”

He ended by affirming his “commitment to the well-being of all Muslims on this planet, as well as all people of all faiths and secular humanists.”

Said Lerner: “We Jews, as well as our non-Jewish allies in all religions and secular humanists, wish to pay honor to the Muslims of the world as they continue today the fast of Ramadan, and join with them in mourning the loss and celebrating the life of Muhammad Ali, a great fighter for justice and peace.”
 

Dixie Cup

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Sep 16, 2006
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You know, he was a great boxer - that's a given. Unfortunately, I know nothing of his life after boxing. If he did a lot of good things - I'm glad that he has affected so many lives.


But, I can't help but wonder if he's ever said anything in public about what was happening to his religion - how it is being hijacked by extremists. It's all well and good to call for an end to Islamophobia.but did he ever address the extremist part of the religion and/or the people who practice it?


Just curious.....