Just over a month after the The Greatest’s death, Muhammad Ali Jr. is
believed to have moved out of his family home in Chicago’s South Side to a more
affluent part of the city.
He was woefully neglected by his absentee father as a child, and badly
bullied by boys who wanted to prove they could beat up the champion’s son
Sources told Radar Online he wanted to move into a better neighborhood
after getting the money.
Children of the boxing hero, who died on June 3, met in California to
discus how to divide his estate.
When Ali Jr. returned, those close to them said he had suddenly come into
money, according to the report.
For the last ten years, he and his family – wife Shaakira and children,
Ameera, eight, and Shakera, seven – have been relying on food stamps and
handouts.
He had been estranged from his sporting legend father for a number of
years.
The insiders say he is moving close to Midway Airport.
They have also hinted that his wife and children won’t completely miss
out.
‘He gave his wife $75 to buy herself something nice, and bought the kids
new shoes. He also wants to set up a trust fund for his kids,’ the source told
the tabloid site.
After suffering problems with addiction, his family now want him to get
clean and get a job.
The insider added: ‘He wants to do landscaping stuff and help people. He
doesn’t need much. He’s a simple dude.’
In an interview with Daily Mail Online shortly before his father’s death,
Ali Jr. said he was in contact with his sisters, but they rarely discussed
family matters.
He said: ‘I’m trying to live life, and be good. I saw him on his 72nd
birthday, then on his 73rd birthday, I sung happy birthday to him, and I heard
nothing back, he didn’t respond and I know it was the Parkinson’s. I knew he
was in a pretty bad shape.
‘I don’t discuss my father to my sisters about anything, I don’t have
anybody I can confide in, so I don’t do that. I don’t really care anymore about
being cut off from the family.
‘I’ve got through so much things in my life, I’ve got to the point where
it doesn’t matter anymore, I live for me. I live life.
‘I know that the last thing about Parkinson’s is being bed ridden, and
he’s been laid up in bed for months.
‘My grandfather also has Parkinson’s, I don’t think about my father, when
my grandfather is in Flossmoor, I’m close to him, more than I am my father,
I’ve got to serve my purpose and help my grandfather Sada Ali-Din, at least I’m
helping somebody.
‘He’s got Parkinson’s, my mother’s father. He lives with Amina.
‘It’s just not something that I worry about, I’ve got more things to
worry about than my father, I got to live life.’
He had claimed he had received nothing from his father before his death.
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