Farzam Farrokhi had worried there would be a horde of people this morning elbowing for a place among the first to see Muhammad Ali's grave.
Instead he found a quiet and reverent stream of visitors. There was not yet a headstone marking the spot. No rope cordoned off those wishing to kneel, pray or kiss the grave.
It would have looked like any unremarkable rectangle of fresh sod had people not been snapping photos. A few brought flowers, one left a tiny set of boxing gloves. A man unfurled an Islamic flag and laid it alongside the grave.
"I can't imagine a heart like Ali's being stuck in a body where he can't do what he wants to do. Now he can be free," he said. "Maybe he's shaking up the next world already."
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Ali was buried yesterday in a corner of his hometown's historic Cave Hill Cemetery, 300 acres famous for its beauty and wildlife.
His headstone will be simple when it's installed, in keeping with Muslim tradition. It will be inscribed with just one word: Ali.
Jake and Janell Bessler drove from Evansville to see it today. On the way, they told their 4-week-old daughter, Violet, sleeping in her car seat, about the boxing great and what he meant to the world.
Visitors trickled in from near and far. James Terry, a Louisville native, carried a map of the cemetery, marking the family plot on the other side where he will one day be buried. He delighted at the idea he will share the same dirt as The Champ.