
Reflecting on the Life and Legacy of the Rev. Jesse Jackson
Clip: 2/17/2026 | 16m 52sVideo has Closed Captions
Despite profound health challenges in his final years, Jackson continued protesting.
Jackson led a lifetime of crusades in the United States and abroad, advocating for the poor and underrepresented on issues from voting rights and job opportunities to education and health care.
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Reflecting on the Life and Legacy of the Rev. Jesse Jackson
Clip: 2/17/2026 | 16m 52sVideo has Closed Captions
Jackson led a lifetime of crusades in the United States and abroad, advocating for the poor and underrepresented on issues from voting rights and job opportunities to education and health care.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> Reverend Jesse Jackson's legacy runs deep in Chicago.
He left his mark on generations of politicians.
Clergy members, organizers and everyday folks joining us to talk about Jesse Jackson.
Our 0th Ward Alderman William Hall, who represents communities like Chatham, Auburn, Gresham in parts of Inglewood, Reverend, Jeanette Wilson, senior adviser to Reverend Jackson of the Rainbow Push Coalition and Kevin Boyle, professor of American history at Northwestern University welcomes all 3 of you.
Thanks for joining My condolences.
I know that you're very close to Reverend Jackson rebel Wilson.
I want to start with you as we watch that obit package and sort of a look back over some of the year's.
What what comes to mind for you where your favorite memories?
Well, Reverend Jackson continue the legacy that Doctor King live.
>> He began his ministry talking about the poor people's campaign.
He became mayor Resurrection City leaving what Dr King started on his last birthday.
A campaign to have the nation look at the plight of poor people, ground black.
Why yellow?
All of those poor people met Reverend Jackson in DC that came a trends and across the country fighting for fair housing, fighting for a livable wage fighting for.
Access to health care for themselves and for their children.
So he started various the prophetic voice that plot for everyone we believe really believe in this rainbow coalition Prague for students to have a high-quality public education at every level of the educational scale who profit teachers to be certified in the city of Chicago.
He fought for access for business people to have access for their products to be on store shelves.
fought for consumers understand the buying power that we have he would tell corporations represent 10% of your market.
You owe us temper some your jobs and contracts.
You fought that all around the nation and fight for freedom in America abroad.
He met Nelson Mandela.
Robbins island prison.
He was with Nelson Mandela when he was released because he fought to end apartheid.
He was with Mandela when he became president.
He went to countries all over the world, freeing hostages.
We often said if we ever traveled, we don't worry about it because we said something happened, Reverend Jackson coming together when Ivan, how you devil to have a good one I was able to look at him.
Reverend Jackson went and rescues.
is there are memories that you have of him that really illustrates what he means to people to anyone.
>> I want to talk a Mississippi, which is where tone the use caution of strip or city in America.
They didn't have a sewage, cleanup problem.
They didn't have running water, clean water filtration.
>> For jets and walked into this little house, one room house with a lady sitting in the middle of the room, Welch's everywhere.
It a smell believe in Mississippi, which is now part of a gamble.
And this is unfair with this one months in South, living like garbage was strong in the ditch from her home.
And so she she couldn't access to have access to health care, shouldn't have access clean water.
And painted a picture of her for the world to see.
So America would have to fix He says that's not right.
Nobody else been to the house.
No government, no County board, president.
He was on the candidate at that time.
Want to marry?
Prophetic Voices said this is not right for people to live like >> Alderman Hall, how did you come to know him?
Well, I mean, first of all is her.
We were in the basement Rainbow shooting Sunday school on her son to school Balkans and she says to me, I think that you need to come back on Saturday and open up the broadcast.
Didn't know what the broadcast was.
Never heard older.
You are the time when I was moved.
Got about.
24 25 so young and I walk out the hallway with river Wilson is Reverend Jackson.
And she tells women Jackson that I'm going to be back on Saturday to open up the broadcast.
if you get a game next you know I I know what to do and our revenue with the nice it is not Miami you're getting ready to talk to the world and it was that moment that he allowed me to clear my throat and say something to the world and from that moment over for rest my life.
I always remember the world that he created for me show.
>> professor of oil.
What do you view as Reverend Jackson's most enduring contribution to American political as well as civil rights history?
think are 2 things that really stand out to me.
>> The most obvious one is he was this transformational figure who is a bridge between that extraordinary generation.
Took the civil rights movement into its greatest breakthroughs and then the age of Obama at the other side, he's the bridge between those.
He's the man who made it possible 4 Americans transition from Jim Crow, America.
Barack Obama's America.
I think your story so powerful that the other side of Jesse Jackson story that I think deserves so much.
More attention.
Is being a voice for people Had every reason to believe in this society that they didn't have a voice, the ability to.
Give people who had reason to have no hope in this nation.
Hope in this nation.
I thought it was a really powerful thing to People say that he was a great patriot.
Because, of course, that's the very definition of patriotism that you represent.
What's best in the American promise.
And become a voice for people.
To share in that hope.
>> Alderman Hall, Reverend Jackson was both a faith leader and politician.
Lots of other things is he's we've discussed rebel Wilson you share those 2 things as well.
You're in alderman as well as as a faith leader.
What lessons do you borrow from him?
Be it, you know, either in the church or working as an first, the best time you ever preaches to show and care for those need and that was the sum and that he preached when there was no camera.
>> That was the sum he preached 2 o'clock in the morning.
We got a phone call from someone who didn't have close because the home was burned out and that's a man is a summit that I'm still trying to preach, which is to show up and to care for those need it.
And Reverend Jackson did for all of us show us what the Bible look like.
His Representative Jackson, Jonathan said early in my daddy at heart as a minister.
And when I say to you that when it comes to the Bible, he lifted and many days on the flight days a long day in a car that Bibles right there in his hand and not only was he a student of the words, he was a student learned how to love.
And he showed that love and space is what most people say.
Don't go.
He sold a lot of people who didn't have a voice and not jus, you know, talking points that you will hear throughout the days.
That was his reality.
He believed in the mission in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
And he didn't need a pulpit.
He didn't need the title.
He didn't need the congregation.
The world was his congregation in every continent.
Every step that he took was who do I show the good news?
good news is that you matter of good news is I'm here to help.
And I think that that message of hope was seen in his life that allowed gospel to not only come to life for those believed in the gospel.
He showed us what invisible got look like.
>> Reverend Jackson, he was known for his work, getting people involved and inspiring them.
network extended to young people.
Of course, in fact, people.
We have a clip of him on Sesame Street and early 70's.
Okay, we have a >> Some make a mistake.
Well, >> am somebody that was a classic rebel Wilson.
What do you what do you think when you when you see that?
>> Well, always wanted to relate to children who I had parents.
Some of them may be in jail.
Know maybe I had a mother didn't have a problem.
>> We Jesse Jackson was my 3rd night.
So you can be something I am somebody who would have people all around the country.
Every school he went to when he went to the tales were anywhere they raise your right hand.
I owe somebody believe in somebody in us and he's saying was if I could come from poverty.
Not living with my father, never lived with my Natural father had a stepfather.
I can do what I have done, was an all American athlete.
He was a valedictorian of his class.
He was head of the student Council.
He was on National Honor Society.
graduated with honors from North Carolina and 2, if I could do all of that, some So you may be poor.
But you asked somebody and he had that little little bit.
He took to he went to prison, a jail school, church everywhere he traveled in the world.
That was his rhythm.
Helping people understand have to be proximate to the needs of people.
You can help if you don't, if not near me.
whole talk a little bit his flair as We know that he had a flair for fashion for speaking.
He loved meeting people.
>> And that's because he was light as many dark moments as he had personally.
You can tell when he was going he didn't dress like he was going through.
He didn't show up like he was going to because that's how selfless he was.
And I think that.
The flare that he had was the light needed in dark spaces.
It was the joy that people needed.
And that's one of the things always remember about him.
That flare wasn't just for the cameras.
It was for the doorman.
It was for the made.
It was for the pilot.
It was for the person selling newspapers.
He mission.
He was driven by mission to give so somebody else can gain something.
And that's what that flare represented was the endless well of joy and peace that he wanted everyone to get ahead of and gave it even when he should be kept it himself and days when we were sleepy was up many days when we were eating, he was fasting because he believed that if I can show up and give can somebody else will have what I might not had.
You mentioned some of those dark days, right?
Professor Boyle, Reverend Jackson, Reverend Jackson's career, not without controversy, right?
When you when you've lived and worked as long as he has.
>> How navigate the criticism he received?
>> Obviously, there was a good bit of criticism in various points in his life.
I think one way, I think what he did was pushed through with that criticism, try to learn from it, try to adjust to it.
I think the really big point I was reading the he's a bit worried this morning.
I got up and saw news.
And it bothered me.
How much of that criticism worked its way into?
This is the New York Times obituary morning because it seems to me that to say that anybody a public figure and ordinary person is imperfect.
Say they're human.
Have a read Jackson often said.
>> When he did, you let he said, don't judge by my just about the box score.
You have to weigh good and the bad.
when you look at all of that, that happened in his life, the good far outweighs the bad and everybody has moments where you're not perfect.
He was perfect man who was a present person who was prophetic voice and he didn't allow his family to hurt anyone else.
He took it and can't move it.
We still laugh at him all the time because he he would just get up and cable.
We will be sad, tired.
We've got to go.
Got to go to the next He never let those moments.
Bury him.
He see you need.
that's going try to me tell you when God tie.
Robyn Goodman, no one was looking for that man.
And then we'll some of the hostages that he brought back.
We didn't even know they will hostages.
And so he just kept going for me and all.
The interesting thing is that he never had hate in his heart.
I've been >> Moments with him meetings on a roll with him and which Reverend argued we had.
right to literally destroy someone's career.
He had a right to, you know, say something very damaging to them.
But he never Was he disappointed moments?
Was he hurt at moments?
Did he share tier 2 moments?
Yes, but he never returned evil with evil.
And I think that that level with next standard of of compassion is what makes the world heavy today is because she returned compassion and love and the presence of hate bigotry and the presence of people who smelled in his face.
But all the time they want to take his place.
And for me to see him take knives out of his bag and 2 walk out of rooms knowing that that was not a room that they wanted me in and to never stop.
Not because he have anything else to do, but because he believed that love can conquer hate, believe wholeheartedly that love can change the world and he lived it.
>> he didn't do it from even tougher You know, some people want the states so that they can be recognized.
He didn't do it for that reason.
He was trying articulate somebody else's pain so that we can address it and fix it.
You know, he's one of the dew points of that.
I know he then where a lot of jewelry.
He didn't wear a lot of fancy clothes.
We all his struggle close to 3rd marching close Professor River Jackson.
He's in the running out of time.
I want to talk about this.
He's recognized as the first black presidential candidate to run a competitive race for major political party.
We mentioned the obit.
>> What are the barriers that he broke in 1988?
Oh, they're absolutely massive barriers and the most fundamental one.
>> Was just to prove that there was a base up substantial base of support for a man of color to run for the presidency United States.
That was something common assumption the United States political wisdom of United States as it is not going to be black president as United States for decades and decades to come.
He proved that was entirely possible.
And that he created a language in his campaigns that it carries into the present day progressive politics in this really powerful direct way.
And then we're looking at what appears to be the memorial that has that has appeared outside Rainbow push headquarters on the South side.
Really >> for this one to you.
What do you think the next generation should carry forward from his life's I think the next generation and now generations so up and serve.
>> He spoke up when they told him to shut up.
He stood up when they told him to sit out the celebrity of him was not lights, camera action.
It was the fact that you can see him working.
And I believe that our generation as rebel Meeks said he left a lot on the field.
He gave us a lot of the blueprint.
So let's continue the protests.
Let's continue identify problems and let's change the policy.
can do that if we just show up in pick up the ball and run, that is where we're going to leave My thanks to all of you Alderman William Hall professor Kevin Boyle and redemption at Wilson.
Thank you so Thank you.
And we're back to wrap things up right after this.
>> Reflecting the people and
Civil Rights Leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson Has Died at 84
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/17/2026 | 7m 47s | He advocated for the poor and underrepresented on a wide range of issues. (7m 47s)
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