It’s all about them

Let us utter a quiet prayer of thanks for the private graveside service for friends and family. It was the only thing that left Muhammad Ali’s leave-taking with a shred of simple human dignity. The rest was a concatenation of self-infatuated egos. political causes of the pop-left persuasion, and Carnival in Rio.

It was all a great show but little else. And what was left out may have been most telling of all: Why would a society that bans cock fighting as barbaric let a splendid athlete—and not a bad rhetorician in his own rhyming way—turn himself into a human punching bag, dead of Parkinson’s at 74? Muhammad Ali rope-a-doped many a hapless opponent in his all too brief time, but in the end the system he was praised for daring to expose and oppose rope-a-doped him.

Meanwhile, out in the world Mohammad Ali/Cassius Clay entertained, the games continued. He got a 19-mile funeral procession followed by a star-studded “memorial service” that was more like A Night with The Stars. It featured luminaries like once and future co-president Bill Clinton, movie director Spike Lee and the all-too imitable Whoopi Goldberg. What fun. And what wretched excess.

Naturally enough Billy Crystal, bad taste incarnated, led the caravan of celebrities. When a society loses touch with propriety, it substitutes celebrity-worship for it. Billy Crystal snapped into his routine automatically. He called Muhammad Ali “a tremendous bolt of lightning, created by Mother Nature out of thin air. He was was funny. He was beautiful. He was the most perfect athlete you ever saw. And those were his own words.” (Applause, canned if necessary.)

Michael Lerner, editor of a thoroughly predictable journal called Tikkun, was there to represent what was once the obligatory Jewish voice in our old tripartite society of the Big Three religions. A poor man’s Abraham Joshua Heschel, he rambled on, drawing applause from a crowd that would applaud any and all of the predictable clichés. It doesn’t take much courage to preach to the converted or to go along with the crowd. Just stand there and you’ll be swept away. Like the confetti after every parade, it’s something else for the street-sweepers to deal with.

The rest of this show was a combination state funeral, pep rally, and general spectacle that would have done justice to some Latin American caudillo, not excluding the feminine variety like Eva Peron. At any event, the crowd was full of ordinary people celebrating their own ordinariness. As the long line of limos crawled by, some people acted like fans at one of Ali’s title fights, pumping up their fists. Others ran alongside the hearse, reaching out to touch it as if it were a holy relic. The crowd threw so many bouquets at the windshield that the driver had to pause from time to time to push them away so he could see.

It was a great show, a grand spectacle, a vast outpouring of true believers, a combination of America 2016 and Rome A.D. 100. What it wasn’t was any kind of fitting tribute to the man and champion Muhammad Ali was. The crowd was there to pay homage to the legend, not the man. Here was a once young man who could have been anything he wanted to by virtue of his brains, brawn, and agility. Instead he became everything to others, who read their own desires, divisions and delusions into him. At the end he got everything except the simple, dignified burial both the least and greatest of us deserves. RIP, at last.

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Paul Greenberg is the Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial writer and columnist for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

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