So much has already been written and spoken about ever since
the news broke of the passing of Muhammad Ali two days ago, that there is hardly
anything I could add more. But I feel
impelled by the force of my emotions to say something. Muhammad Ali's life was a brilliant example
of the fact that you don't have to be perfect to be great. He was arguably the greatest sportsman is a
given, but very few people in history have transcended their chosen profession
in life and become something larger than the sum of their whole, and he was one
of them. It was as if the whole world
was not big enough to contain his manic energy.
So much of our life is about direction, the relentless momentum, in
fact, he said that if you are the same person at fifty as you were at twenty,
then you have wasted thirty years of your life.
He was a fighter to the core when he refused to be drafted for Vietnam
war which he considered to be unjust on the ground that the poor Vietnamese
thousands of miles away posed no threat to the United States, and he was a conscientious
objector. He suffered a grave setback to
his professional career when his licence was revoked for three years for
dereliction of national duty, until his suspension was overturned by the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1971. If anyone else
would say I am the greatest, you would think of him as a deluded braggart, but
Ali had this immense self belief to walk the walk and talk the talk.
He had the choice
to keep his head down, follow the straight and narrow, in other words, remain
non-controversial, and he could have minted millions. But not him,
instead he decided to become a tireless advocate for the rights of his
people and an uncompromising critic of racial prejudice widely prevalent at the
time. The man was a true showman, he loved
the theater of the boxing arena where he literally floated like a butterfly and
stung like a bee, at least during the first half of his career. There was a time when a vast section of white
America practically hated him, but he didn't care because what was more
important was to stand by your conviction.
If Dr. King provided a peaceful resistance to the racial bigotry,
then Ali along with Malcolm X gave the
whole thing a radical edge. In the end,
a grateful nation did make up and some more when he was given the highest honor
of the land, The Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005. It remains one of the most moving sight in
sports history when Muhammad Ali, his body badly shaking due to the ravages of
Parkinson, lighting up the Olympic torch at the Atlanta games in 1996 with so
much dignity and solemnity. We will not
have another Muhammad Ali.
No comments:
Post a Comment