When Muhammad Ali died five years ago, his name was known worldwide. But it was home, to Louisville, Kentucky, where he returned. (More Sports News)
From his death on June 3, 2016, to his funeral a week later, the Bluegrass community that raised him joined visitors from around the globe to celebrate the life and legacy of “The Greatest.” That week is the focus of the new documentary, “City of Ali.”
Running at just under an hour and a half, “City of Ali” shows the way Ali's hometown united during his death. As the funeral procession snaked its way through the city to the cemetery, the streets were lined with admirers throwing flowers onto his hearse and shouting his name.
“He was always so excited to go back to Louisville and to see his people, because that's where it all started,” recalled Ali's daughter, Rasheda Ali.
“He loved Louisville and Louisville loved him back.”
Rasheda Ali, who participated in the documentary, says learning of the events surrounding that week was special to her because it was during her “darkest hour.”
“Everything around this moment was just a big blur for me and my family,” she said in a Zoom interview with The Associated Press.
Ali may have been known to float like a butterfly and sting like a bee, but there was much more to the man. Ali used his words as effectively as he used his fists, refusing to be silenced by those who did not like what he had to say.
“My dad stood for inclusion, my dad stood for racial equality, for peace and love,” said Rasheda Ali.
“Muhammad, he did not change his conviction. He stayed true to who he was.”
As one of the highest profile conscientious objectors and someone who spoke out against racial inequality, Ali remains a symbol of resistance and strength to many in Louisville.
“I definitely don't think you can be Black in America and not be inspired by Muhammad Ali,” said Phelix Crittenden, a community organizer for Blacks Organizing Strategic Success (BOSS).
Crittenden said meeting Ali, though briefly, left an impact.
“He told my parents to watch out for me because I was going to be somebody,” Crittenden said.
“I would hope that I'm proving him right and serving him justice by getting into this realm of uplifting marginalized voices.”