Rev. Jesse Jackson dies age 84
Civil rights campaigner, faith leader and presidential candidate
WASHINGTON (Gray DC) - Civil rights icon the Reverend Jesse Jackson has died at age 84.
The faith leader had lost his voice to a rare neurological disease in the final months of his life. He’d been diagnosed with Parkinson’s about a decade abo.
Born Jesse Burns to a 16-year-old single mother in Greenville, South Carolina in 1941, the future Reverend Jesse Jackson was a child of the Jim Crow South. He took the last name of his stepfather.
After graduating from college in 1964, Jackson moved to Chicago to attend the Chicago Theological Seminary.
Jackson dropped out in 1966 - three credits short of graduating - after getting his start in the Civil Rights Movement working for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
He was ordained as a Reverend in 1968 and the school awarded Jackson his Master’s degree in 2000 counting his life experiences and previous work in place of those three missing credits.
Impressed by Jackson, King and fellow civil rights leader James Bevel tapped Jackson to lead “Operation Breadbasket” in Chicago, Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s economic division.
In 1971, Jackson left Operation Breadbasket to start the Operation PUSH. Short for “People United to Save Humanity,” its goal was advancing social justice and civil rights.
Operation PUSH would come to prominence as it led boycotts of several companies including Coca-Cola, Anheuser-Busch and Nike pushing the companies to hire more Black workers and buy from Black-owned businesses.
In addition to activism, Jackson aimed for the presidency. He sought the Democratic nomination in both 1984 and 1988.
After coming in a distant third in 1984, Jackson had a much stronger showing in 1988, winning 13 states and finishing runner-up to eventual nominee Michael Dukakis.
However, activism was never far from his campaign.
The Rainbow Coalition grew out of his presidential run, eventually merging with Operation PUSH to form the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, which still fights for social justice and civil rights today.
After his presidential runs, Jackson walked the halls of Congress, serving as the “Shadow Senator” for Washington, D.C. from 1991 to 1997.
He continued to back Democratic Party candidates, including giving an early endorsement to fellow Chicagoan Barack Obama’s successful 2008 presidential bid.
In 2017, Jackson was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease.
A minister… Jackson devoted his life his Baptist faith through serving others. He’s survived by his wife, Jaquelin and 6 children, including Illinois Congressman Jonathan Jackson and the former Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr.
The family is posting condolences and remembrances online.
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