LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Muhammad Ali's last wish was that people from all walks of life could gather together to bid him one final goodbye.
Surely, he would have been pleased with what took place Thursday just a few steps from where he made his pro debut more than a half century ago.
Boxing royalty mixed easily with common folks inside the convention center. Muslims prayed during the service attended by Christians, Jews and nonbelievers.
And over on one side, those with sharp eyes saw civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson lean over a row of chairs to hug Louis Farrakhan, the head of the Nation of Islam.
Yes, it would have pleased Ali, probably even more than will Friday's star-studded memorial service, which features at least one president and a king. These were his people, from spiky-haired Don King waving flags to 73-year-old Barbara Hillman, a black woman from Louisville clutching the tickets she received after getting up at 3 a.m. to get in line the other morning.
All ages. All colors. All faiths.
All there for Ali.
"Who else could pass away and bring all this unity and peace?" asked Hillman, whose husband was in the same 1960 graduating class at Louisville's Central High as Ali. "He has included everybody. Young, old, black, white and all religions."