Longtime civil rights leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson dies at 84

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

By Luca von Burkersroda

Rev. Jesse Jackson, Voice of the Rainbow Coalition, Dies at 84

Luca von Burkersroda

Longtime civil rights leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson dies at 84

Roots in the Civil Rights Crucible (Image Credits: Upload.wikimedia.org)

Chicago – The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a forceful advocate for civil rights and economic equality who reshaped American politics through his presidential bids, died Tuesday at age 84.

Roots in the Civil Rights Crucible

Born on October 8, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, Jackson immersed himself in activism early. He joined a 1960 sit-in at a segregated library, earning arrest as one of the “Greenville Eight.”[1][2]

At North Carolina A&T, he led student efforts amid the sit-in movement. Jackson marched in Selma in 1965 and coordinated Chicago operations for Martin Luther King Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He led Operation Breadbasket, pushing companies to hire Black workers.[1]

Present in Memphis during King’s 1968 assassination, Jackson emerged as a national figure. Ordained that year as a Baptist minister, he founded Operation PUSH in 1971 to bolster Black economic power.[3]

Presidential Firebrand and Rainbow Vision

Jackson launched his first Democratic presidential campaign in 1983, galvanizing millions. His 1984 effort registered over a million new voters and earned 3.5 million votes, invoking a “Rainbow Coalition” of the poor, workers, and minorities.[1]

In 1988, he won 11 primaries, the strongest showing by a Black candidate until Barack Obama. Though controversies arose, including remarks about New York City’s Jewish community for which he apologized, his runs elevated minority voices in politics.[2]

  • Organized voter drives that helped elect Chicago’s first Black mayor, Harold Washington, in 1983.
  • Merged PUSH with the National Rainbow Coalition in 1996.
  • Received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2000.
  • Hosted CNN’s “Both Sides with Jesse Jackson” from 1992 to 2000.

Global Reach and Enduring Battles

Jackson negotiated releases of captives worldwide, including Americans from Syria, Cuba, Iraq, and Yugoslavia. He protested police violence into his final years, linking modern marches to the civil rights era.[3]

Health challenges mounted after a 2017 Parkinson’s diagnosis and progressive supranuclear palsy. He endured COVID-19 hospitalization in 2021 and stepped down from Rainbow/PUSH leadership in 2023, yet attended events like the 2024 Democratic National Convention.[1]

Married to Jacqueline since 1963, he raised five children with her, including Rep. Jonathan Jackson and former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. He also acknowledged a daughter from another relationship.

A Servant Leader’s Lasting Echo

Jackson died peacefully at his Chicago home, surrounded by family. His children released a statement: “Our father was a servant leader – not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world… His unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions, and we ask you to honor his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by.”[2][3]

Key Takeaways

  • Transformed Democratic politics by building diverse coalitions and boosting Black voter turnout.
  • Secured freedom for dozens held abroad through personal diplomacy.
  • Inspired hope with slogans like “Keep Hope Alive” amid personal and national struggles.

Rev. Jackson bridged eras from Jim Crow to modern justice fights, proving one voice could challenge power structures. His call to “keep hope alive” endures as a charge to future generations. What do you think his greatest impact was? Tell us in the comments.

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