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Muhammad Ali's body arrives in Louisville

<p>It will be a funeral fit for "The Greatest."</p><p>Family, friends and fans will get to bid farewell to Muhammad Ali later this week in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky.</p><p>Ali's family will hold a private ceremony on Thursday. </p><p>But the public will have multiple opportunities to pay their respects to the boxing champ on Friday. A procession through the city will begin at 9 a.m. local time and will travel down Muhammad Ali Boulevard and the neighborhood he grew up in. It will end at Cave Hill Cemetery where he'll be buried in a private ceremony.</p><p>The public funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. local time at the KFC YUM! Center <a href="http://alicenter.org/memorial-service/" target="_blank">with limited seating available for the public</a>. </p><p>"Muhammad Ali was truly the people's champion, and the celebration will reflect his devotion to people of all races, religions and backgrounds," said family spokesman Bob Gunnell at a <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNDkmUuiERI" target="_blank">press conference on Saturday</a>. </p><p>An Ali family spokesperson said the legend planned his own funeral years ago. The public service will include representatives from many different religions and will be led by an imam. </p><p>Former President Bill Clinton, sportscaster Bryant Gumbel and actor and comedian Billy Crystal will eulogize the boxing champion. </p><p>Those who can't make it to pay their respects can watch a live stream of the funeral on the <a href="http://www.alicenter.org/home/" target="_blank">Muhammad Ali Center's website</a>. </p><p>A spokesperson said family and friends expected the legend to pull through like he had many other times after being hospitalized. However, it became clear later in the week that his condition was deteriorating. </p><p>Ali died Friday night at a Phoenix-area hospital of "septic shock due to unspecified natural causes." Ali had battled Parkinson's disease for more than 30 years. He was surrounded by close family in his final hours.</p><p>His daughter Hana <a href="https://twitter.com/hanayali/status/739138206524805122" target="_blank">tweeted Saturday</a> that family members held Ali's hands and told him it was OK to let go. She said: "All of his organs failed but his HEART wouldn't stop beating. For 30 minutes...his heart just kept beating. No one had ever seen anything like it. A true testament to the strength of his Spirit and Will!"</p><p><i>This video includes clips from </i><i><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTkOYXKbcrU" target="_blank">ESPN</a></i><i>, images from Getty Images and features music from </i><a href="http://freemusicarchive.org/music/chris_zabriskie/divider/05_-_oxygen_garden" target="_blank"><i>Chris Zabriskie / CC BY 3.0</i></a><i>. </i></p>
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LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Muhammad Ali's younger brother wept, swayed to hymns and hugged anyone he could reach. He raised his hands to the sky, eyes closed, surrounded by congregants at the church where their father once worshipped.

Rahaman Ali took center stage at the two-hour, high-energy service at King Solomon Missionary Baptist Church, sitting in a front-row pew with his wife, Caroline. The church is not far from the little pink house in Louisville's west end where the Ali brothers grew up.

It was one of several emotional remembrances Sunday as the city joined together to mourn its most celebrated son, the Louisville Lip. Later this week, politicians, celebrities and fans from around the globe are expected for a Friday memorial service that Ali planned himself with the intent of making it open to all.

Ali's body was returned to his grieving hometown for the final time. An airplane carrying the boxing great's body landed Sunday afternoon.

At his father's church, the congregation stood in tribute, prayed for the former three-time heavyweight champion and his family and even dug into their pockets, filling a collection plate for Rahaman and his wife as a show of support.

"There is no greater man that has done more for this city than Muhammad Ali," said the church's assistant pastor, Charles Elliott III, drawing a round of "amens" and prolonged applause from the congregation.

Elliott recalled the comical side of the former boxing champion and global humanitarian, who died Friday night at an Arizona hospital.

Elliott said his grandmother was once a nanny to Ali's family. He visited as a wide-eyed young boy, he said, and recalled the house had an elevator and a parrot who called out: "Here comes the champ, here comes the champ."

His father, the Rev. Charles Elliott Jr., knew Ali for decades and remembered his generosity. He recalled when he was raising money in the 1960s to keep a program running to feed the city's hungry, and Ali cut him a check. At the time, the program offered food twice a week, he said.

"He came in and he said, 'Reverend, let's feed 'em every day. I'll give you a check,'" the elder Elliott said.

The solace he found Sunday morning, he said, was that Ali's suffering was finally over. He noted that Ali's daughter said The Greatest's heart kept beating a half-hour after the rest of his organs failed.

"Ali always did something nobody ever did," Elliott said.

Ali's father, Cassius Clay Sr., a painter, was a member of King Solomon before his death decades ago. He painted a mural of Jesus' baptism that still hangs behind the pulpit.

Muhammad Ali sometimes accompanied his father to the church, even after the boxer had announced his conversion to Islam.

The Rev. Wanda McIntyre, who presided over the early service, said it reminded her that he believed above all in living life with tolerance and an open heart.

"Rivers, lakes, ponds, streams, oceans all have different names, but they all contain water," he once said. "So do religions have different names, and they all contain truth, expressed in different forms and times. It doesn't matter if you're a Muslim, a Christian, or a Jew. When you believe in God, you should believe that all people are part of one family."

Andre Watkins had his own way of paying tribute to the champ, shadowboxing Sunday morning outside King Solomon.

"I thought he couldn't die he was so good," Watkins said.

Elsewhere in Ali's hometown, the memorial grew outside the Muhammad Ali Center as fans poured in from far and near for the glimpse at history. They left boxing gloves, butterflies and handwritten letters.

Joseph Obiri put on his Muhammad Ali T-shirt, the same one he's worn in tribute since the news of the boxer's death reached him, and brought his 2-year-old son Samuel from their home in Cincinnati. He took lots of pictures so that years from now, the boy will be able to look back on this day and know he was part of something special.

Leslie Neidig added three bouquets of flowers to the growing memorial outside the Ali Center.

She said was in elementary school in Louisville decades ago, when the teacher announced that Ali would come by to talk to the kids. It frightened her, she said, expecting the famed boxer would be intimidating. But he surprised her. What she remembers now is his big smile and big laugh.

"I felt like he cared about all of us, all of us no matter what we looked like," she said.