LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Every year on the same day, Muhammad Babar plans to walk past a soaring clock tower that juts 180 feet toward the sky, through a gate and into Cave Hill Cemetery, one of his city's greatest wonders.
It will be an annual pilgrimage to visit The Greatest, his hero, Muhammad Ali.
The boxing superstar will be buried at the cemetery — already on the National Register of Historic Places and the final resting place of Kentucky Fried Chicken founder Col. Harland Sanders — on Friday. Ali's tomb will undoubtedly become a draw for visitors from around the world.
"I think it will be a symbol of purity, a symbol of compassion, a symbol of commitment, dedication, conviction and perseverance under most difficult circumstances," Babar said.
Ali always said he wished to be buried in his hometown, where he learned to box and fought his first fight; where he built a museum and the city named a street in his honor.
"He wanted to come home," family spokesman Bob Gunnell said.
He chose Cave Hill a decade ago. The challenge was deciding on a plot among its 300 acres. He toured its twisting paths, towering trees and 130,000 graves whose inscriptions assemble into a who's who of Kentucky history.
"He fell in love with this site," Gunnell said.