Rev. Jesse Jackson, Voice of a People, Dies at 84 By Dennis Richmond, Jr., M.S.Ed.

Date:

Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, a towering voice in the struggle for Black freedom, dignity, and opportunity, died on Tuesday, February 17, 2026. He was 84 years old.

“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 said in a statement Tuesday.

Born on October 8, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, Jackson came of age during a time when segregation shaped every part of Black life. From those beginnings, he rose to become one of the most recognizable leaders to carry forward the movement for justice after the era of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. As a young organizer within the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Jackson stood on the front lines of boycotts, marches, and voter registration efforts, helping to push America closer to its promises.

After King’s assassination in 1968, Jackson stepped into a new role, founding Operation PUSH—People United to Save Humanity—and later the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition. These organizations focused not just on protest, but on power: economic power, educational access, and political influence for Black communities and other marginalized people. Jackson believed that freedom meant more than laws—it meant opportunity.

He carried that belief into the national spotlight when he ran for president in 1984 and 1988. For many Black Americans, Jackson’s campaigns were more than politics—they were possibilities. His “Rainbow Coalition” brought together Black voters, Latinos, working-class families, and progressives, showing that a new kind of political power could be built from the ground up. His 1988 run, in particular, made history and helped open doors that future leaders would walk through.

But beyond the speeches and campaigns, Jackson’s greatest impact may have been his message. His words, “I Am Somebody,” echoed in churches, classrooms, and living rooms across the country. He reminded generations of Black children—and Black adults—that their lives had value in a society that too often tried to say otherwise.

Even in his later years, Jackson never stopped speaking out—on voting rights, economic justice, and the ongoing fight for equality. He remained a steady voice, reminding the nation that the work of freedom is never finished.

Rev. Jesse Jackson leaves behind more than a legacy—he leaves behind a charge. To keep pushing. To keep believing. And to never forget that we are, and have always been, somebody.

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