Muhammad Ali had a lifelong mission to help those in need

The champ's legacy outside of the ring was just as impressive as the one inside.
 By 
Peter Allen Clark
 on 
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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

As we say goodbye to the Champ, the legacy he left outside of the ring remains just as important as the one inside.

Muhammad Ali dedicated his life, both locally and globally, to help those in need and to work towards gender, economic and racial equality. Ali traveled the world to learn about its people, inspire religious tolerance and offer assistance where he could. 

HIs charitable works spread wide across America. 


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Ali worked generously with the Make-A-Wish Foundation and the Special Olympics. He visited soup kitchens and raised money through celebrity fight nights. 

“I’ve always wanted to be more than just a boxer," Ali said. "More than just the three-time heavyweight champion. I wanted to use my fame, and this face that everyone knows so well, to help uplift and inspire people around the world.”


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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Religious tolerance also played a large role in his life. Though he was devoutly Muslim, he regularly met with leaders of other faiths to impart a greater understanding between the religions of the world. 

"Rivers, ponds, lakes, and streams -- they all have different names, but they all contain water. So religions all have different names, but they all contain the same truths," Ali was quoted as saying by CNN, when asked about 9/11. "I think the people of our religion should be tolerant and understand people believe different things. It's a shame that this (tolerance) didn't happen before."


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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable


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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

His work extended globally, too. The United Nations named Ali a Messenger of Peace in 1998 because of his work with developing nations. 

"Mr. Ali first came to the UN in 1978 to address the UN Special Committee against Apartheid with a message of peace and spirituality," reads his biography on the UN website. "He brings people from all races together by preaching 'healing' to everyone irrespective of race, religion or age. Over the years Mr. Ali has been a relentless advocate for people in need and a significant humanitarian actor in the developing world, supporting relief and development initiatives and hand-delivering food and medical supplies to hospitals, street children and orphanages in Africa and Asia."


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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Ali traveled with Disarm Education Fund and Direct Relief International to deliver $1.2 million-worth of medicine and medicinal supply to Cuba in 1998. He brought humanitarian aid to the Ivory Coast. He made mission trips to both Afghanistan and North Korea to promote goodwill. 

When Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990, Ali went to South Africa to meet him.  


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Ali presents officials of the Juan Manuel Marquez clinic with boxes of medicine  in Old Havana as Ali's wife Lonnie looks on in 1998. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

Returning back to support his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, Ali and his wife helped start the Muhammad Ali Center in 2005, with the goal of bringing his mission of opportunity and assistance to his community.

"In its 10-year history, the center has created programs that exemplify the principles of Muhammad Ali and the mission of the center," the center's website reads. "Over the past decade, the center has developed impactful programming serving children and adults, reaching people of all cultures, nationalities, ages, and geographic areas."

The center's mission focuses around educational opportunities, programs to promote gender equality in all areas and inspiring global citizenship.


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Ali receives the thanks of  sister Beltran in Casablanca, after the sister came from the Ivory Coast to take delivery of humanitarian aid brought by Ali for her mission. The former champion brought five tonnes of food, clothing and medicine to help Liberian refugees. Credit: ABDELHAK SENNA/AFP/Getty Images

His charitable accomplishments were also felt by those closest to him.

"Today, we are in greater need of heroes like my father, especially in a sports culture where athletes seem to be chasing fame merely for the pleasure of making money or breaking records," Ali's daughter Hana Ali wrote about him in 2011. "There is little awareness of the responsibilities that accompany fame... I extend my gratitude to my father. Helping strangers in need has always been his insatiable drive."

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.


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Peter Allen Clark

I have done neat stuff all over these United States from sailing lessons on the Puget Sound to motorcycle maintenance on the backroads of upstate New York. My professional experience extends from newspaper reporting in the mountains of Eastern Oregon to fixing espresso machines throughout Kentucky. I also have kept a cat alive for 10 years.

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