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whitehouse:
“Muhammad Ali was The Greatest. Period. If you just asked
him, he’d tell you. He’d tell you he was the double greatest; that he’d
‘handcuffed lightning, thrown thunder into jail.’
But what made
The Champ the greatest—what truly separated him from everyone else—is
that everyone else would tell you pretty much the same thing.
Like
everyone else on the planet, Michelle and I mourn his passing. But
we’re also grateful to God for how fortunate we are to have known him,
if just for a while; for how fortunate we all are that The Greatest
chose to grace our time.
In my private study, just off the Oval
Office, I keep a pair of his gloves on display, just under that iconic
photograph of him—the young champ, just 22 years old, roaring like a
lion over a fallen Sonny Liston. I was too young when it was taken to
understand who he was—still Cassius Clay, already an Olympic Gold Medal
winner, yet to set out on a spiritual journey that would lead him to his
Muslim faith, exile him at the peak of his power, and set the stage for
his return to greatness with a name as familiar to the downtrodden in
the slums of Southeast Asia and the villages of Africa as it was to
cheering crowds in Madison Square Garden.
‘I am America,’ he once
declared. 'I am the part you won’t recognize. But get used to me—black,
confident, cocky; my name, not yours; my religion, not yours; my goals,
my own. Get used to me.’
That’s the Ali I came to know as I came
of age—not just as skilled a poet on the mic as he was a fighter in the
ring, but a man who fought for what was right. A man who fought for us.
He stood with King and Mandela; stood up when it was hard; spoke out
when others wouldn’t. His fight outside the ring would cost him his
title and his public standing. It would earn him enemies on the left and
the right, make him reviled, and nearly send him to jail. But Ali stood
his ground. And his victory helped us get used to the America we
recognize today.
He wasn’t perfect, of course. For all his magic
in the ring, he could be careless with his words, and full of
contradictions as his faith evolved. But his wonderful, infectious, even
innocent spirit ultimately won him more fans than foes—maybe because in
him, we hoped to see something of ourselves. Later, as his physical
powers ebbed, he became an even more powerful force for peace and
reconciliation around the world. We saw a man who said he was so mean
he’d make medicine sick reveal a soft spot, visiting children with
illness and disability around the world, telling them they, too, could
become the greatest. We watched a hero light a torch, and fight his
greatest fight of all on the world stage once again; a battle against
the disease that ravaged his body, but couldn’t take the spark from his
eyes.
Muhammad Ali shook up the world. And the world is better for
it. We are all better for it. Michelle and I send our deepest
condolences to his family, and we pray that the greatest fighter of them
all finally rests in peace.” —President Obama
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