
A Star Athlete’s Call to Activism (Image Credits: Upload.wikimedia.org)
Chicago – Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, the charismatic activist who emerged as a leading voice in the civil rights struggle after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, died Tuesday at his home here surrounded by family. He was 84.[1][2]
A Star Athlete’s Call to Activism
Born on October 8, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, Jackson grew up amid the harsh realities of segregation. The son of a teenage mother and a neighboring boxer, he was adopted by his stepfather and excelled as a quarterback at Sterling High School. A football scholarship took him to the University of Illinois, but racial barriers prompted a transfer to North Carolina A&T, a historically Black college, where he thrived as quarterback, honor student, and student body president.[1]
College life immersed him in the burgeoning civil rights era. Just months after arriving in 1960, he joined the “Greenville Eight” sit-in at a whites-only library, leading to his arrest. By 1965, Jackson marched in Selma alongside King for voting rights.[2]
Witness to History, Architect of Change
Jackson’s path converged dramatically with King’s in Chicago, where he launched Operation Breadbasket under the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to push companies toward hiring Black workers. On April 4, 1968, he stood at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis when King fell to an assassin’s bullet. Positioning himself as King’s successor, Jackson wore a bloodstained turtleneck to memorial events, symbolizing his commitment.[1]
In 1971, he broke from the SCLC to found Operation PUSH—People United to Save Humanity—targeting economic justice through boycotts and lawsuits. This evolved into the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, uniting diverse groups for voting rights, jobs, education, and health care. His mantra, “I am Somebody,” resonated widely: “I may be poor, but I am Somebody; I may be young, but I am Somebody.”[1]
Presidential Bids and Global Reach
Jackson shattered barriers with Democratic presidential runs in 1984 and 1988, the most successful for a Black candidate until Barack Obama. He won primaries, registered millions of voters, and popularized the “Rainbow Coalition” of poor and working-class Americans. Supporters chanted his slogan, “Keep hope alive.”[2]
Abroad, he secured releases like Navy Lt. Robert Goodman from Syria in 1984, hostages from Iraq in 1990, and Americans from Yugoslavia in 1999. President Bill Clinton awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2000. Even in Las Vegas, Jackson protested outside Trump International Hotel in 2016 alongside union workers.[1]
- 1965: Joined Selma to Montgomery march.
- 1971: Founded Operation PUSH.
- 1984: First presidential campaign; registered over 1 million voters.
- 1988: Won 13 primaries and caucuses.
- 2000: Received Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Trials, Resilience, and Final Days
Controversies marked his path, including a 1984 “Hymietown” remark and a 2000 personal scandal, but Jackson pressed on. Ordained in 1968, he earned a Master of Divinity in 2000. Married to Jacqueline Brown since 1963, he raised five children, including two former congressmen, and supported a daughter from another relationship.
Health woes intensified late: Parkinson’s in 2017, progressive supranuclear palsy in 2023. Yet he protested into the Black Lives Matter era, attending the 2024 Democratic National Convention and urging cease-fires. In his final months, nonverbal, he communicated through hand squeezes.[1]
“Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world,” the Jackson family stated. “We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family.”[1]
Rev. Al Sharpton hailed him as “a consequential and transformative leader” who “kept the dream alive.”[1]
Key Takeaways
- Transformed civil rights activism through economic boycotts and broad coalitions.
- Pioneered Black presidential viability, paving paths for future leaders.
- Embodied resilience, activism persisting despite debilitating illnesses.
Jackson tore down walls, scarred but unbowed, opening paths for others. His call to “keep hope alive” endures as a challenge to future generations. What aspects of his legacy resonate most with you? Share in the comments.