The funeral for former bikie boss Mahmoud "Mick" Hawi was held at the Fatima Al-Zahra Mosque today.
It was a low-key funeral where club patches, colours and motorbikes were conspicuous by their absence.
Mourners filed into the Arncliffe mosque, some bearing photographs of Hawi on their backs, to farewell the former Comanchero president who was gunned down in a daylight execution outside a Rockdale gym last Thursday.
Just after 1pm, more than 20 men, all dressed in black, arrived in three white limousines ahead of the prayers.
One man held a framed picture of Hawi against his chest as he led the silent entourage into the mosque.
The casket bearing the Beirut-born migrant was draped in dark cloth covered in coloured Arabic writing.
It was visible only briefly as his flower-laden hearse rolled onto the street following the service.
It was followed by a convoy of white Rolls-Royce and Bentley cars bound for Rookwood Cemetery where Hawi, 37, will be buried this afternoon.
The state's Criminal Gangs Squad and Homicide Squad with local police are still hunting for Hawi's killers.
He was shot numerous times in the head and body by a balaclava-clad gunman in full view of other gym goers outside Fitness First in West Botany Street.
The killer fled on foot but is believed to have left the area in a grey Mercedes-Benz station wagon, which was seen turning onto West Botany Street from Lindsay Street shortly after the shooting.
The car was later found set alight in nearby Chandler Street.
Hawi had been keeping a low profile after his release from jail in 2015 over the 2009 killing of Hells Angel associate Anthony Zervas at Sydney Airport.
Police believe Hawi did not rejoin the Comancheros after his prison stint because Hawi realised his manslaughter conviction would make him an easy target for police using anti-consorting laws.