Rev. Jesse Jackson lived the kind of life that makes you wonder how he managed to squeezed everything into a single lifetime. Not only was he present on the balcony in Memphis when Martin Luther King Jr. was killed. He also ran for president twice. Here was a man who didn’t just stand by and watch history unfold, he walked right into the centre of it all. Today we bid farewell to the 84 year old activist reported CNN.
Jesse Jackson was so much more than just a “civil rights leader”. He was a force to be reckoned with, that’s for sure. Regardless of whether you loved his politics or found him exhausting, he was a man you could not ignore. He had a rhythmic style of speaking and a powerful voice that boomed, making a crowded room feel like it was vibrating. The slogan “I Am Somebody” became a lifeline for people who felt like the world had forgotten about.
The Political Shocker
His 1984 and 1988 presidential runs were rather radical. Back then, the idea of a Black man winning the nomination was unheard of. But Jackson possessed a fire that could not be quenched. He went out and built what he called the “Rainbow Coalition.” He wasn’t just looking for Black voters, oh no, he showed up at farms in the Midwest and factory gates in the Rust Belt, trying to stitch together a group of people who all felt unseen. While he didn’t win, he did go on to prove that the math worked. He registered millions of new voters and paved the path for someone like Barack Obama to eventually walk through. He commanded a national stage and remained unapologetically Black.
A Complicated Legacy
He wasn’t perfect by any standards. He said things that hurt people. There were tensions behind the scenes, disagreements that didn’t stay quiet. And at times, it felt like he enjoyed the spotlight, maybe even needed it a little more than he let on. He could be controversial, even among those who shared his goals. But when we look at his life, we see a man that went from being a young lieutenant in the SCLC to a global negotiator. He flew into conflict zones to get hostages released when the State Department couldn’t. Although he spent his later years dealing with Parkinson’s, that never stopped him. He showed up leaning on a walker, protesting at a picket line or a rally, fighting to the end.
With Jesse Jackson gone, it feels like the end of a specific, fiery era of activism. Jesse Jackson will be remembered for being loud, bold, and deeply human. A man who left the country looking very different than when he found it.
