The funeral, at Detroit's Greater Grace Temple,
will feature performances by those influenced by Franklin's
singular, soaring voice, including singers Chaka Khan and Ariana
Grande.
It will mark her role, through songs such as 1967's "Respect,"
in scoring a soundtrack for the civil rights movement, with
remarks from activists Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton.
Having sung at the inaugurations of three presidents, Jimmy
Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, Franklin was an American
institution, and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
by former President George W. Bush in 2005.
Franklin died at her Detroit home on Aug. 16 from pancreatic
cancer. She began her musical career as a child singing gospel
at the city's New Bethel Baptist Church, where her father, C.L.
Franklin, was the pastor, famous for his hypnotic sermons.
The city has treated her death as the passing of royalty, her
body laying in repose in the Charles H. Wright Museum of African
American History's grand rotunda for two days of public
visitation earlier this week.
Her coffin is to be entombed on Friday in Detroit's Woodlawn
Cemetery near the remains of her father; her brother, Cecil
Franklin; and her sisters, Carolyn and Erma Franklin.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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