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Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Rev. Jesse Jackson charmed the great and the infamous, trying to make a difference

Rev. Jesse Jackson, 1982 (Chicago Sun-Times file photo)

     The Century Shopping Centre at 2828 N. Clark Street was built inside the old Diversey Theatre, a defunct 1925 vaudeville house. It has an interior atrium, sort of Water Tower Place Lite, and a winding ramp, past seven stories of shops.
     My then wife-to-be and I were wandering there, years ago, heading up the ramp, when we encountered a mass of people coming the other way. Rev. Jesse Jackson, with a knot of shoppers, photographers and media. Campaigning for Eugene Sawyer, if I recall correctly.
     "I'd like to meet him!" my future spouse said.
     I brought her up to Rev. Jackson and made the introduction.
     "May I kiss you?" he asked, to my surprise, and hers. But she agreed. The kiss occurred.
     We parted ways, the famous civil rights leaders and his entourage heading one way, my significant other and I heading another. Someone needed to say something. A thought came to me.
     "Congratulations," I said. "You just kissed Yasser Arafat by proxy."
     That neatly summarizes the dilemma of Rev. Jackson, who died Tuesday. He met the Dalai Lama and the bloodstained leader of the P.L.O. He hung out with Martin Luther King and Robert Mugabe, responsible for the deaths of 20,000 Zimbabweans. A moral man, generally, who met highly immoral people and sometimes held their hands and prayed. He visited Saddam Hussein, Hafez al-Assad and Fidel Castro.
      "Jackson has made a career of giving dictators such as Slobodan Milosevic a chance to show their gentler side by releasing captives at his request," a Time magazine columnist noted in 1999. "It’s not mere ego tripping, as some cynics charge, or an expression of Jackson’s deeply held belief in nonviolence. It’s almost Faustian. I think he needs the rush that only bargaining with evil can provide."
     Another dilemma for Rev. Jackson. To draw media attention to particular problems, prisoners, picket lines, he needed to draw attention to himself. It wasn't supposed to be about him. Yet it was.
     Rev. Jackson was master of firing torpedoes that circled back and impacted into his own vessel. He mounted the first viable presidential campaign by a Black candidate in 1984, then hired Louis Farrakhan to do his campaign security and called New York "Hymietown" in the presence of a newspaper reporter, who Farrakhan later threatened to kill for spilling the beans.
     The "man of contrasts" summation might be a cliche. But with Rev. Jackson, it was true. He could whipsaw you with it. In 2008, when Barack Obama was elected president, Jackson made the rounds of editorial offices, humbly pointing out that it was pioneers such as, ahem, himself, who made Obama's triumph possible.
     Then Jackson immediately said, into an open Fox News microphone, that he'd like to castrate Obama. Which puffed away the cloud of revered pioneer respect he was trying to fog around himself

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17 comments:

  1. Nice that he kissed her. Wondering if on the cheek or lips. Don't try that in the nasty south in the 1950's/60's.

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  2. Sounds like he was jealous of Obama

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    1. Thought the same. Wasn't the smooth operator that Obama was.
      And what kind of bargains did he make with the Orange Devil?

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  3. Irritation and resentment came back as I read this while another part of my brain was trying to hold on to Jackson's accomplishments. The coda says it all.

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  4. Excellent job of pointing out how Jackson would embrace regimes that mainstream US saw as corrupt and authoritarian to free Americans. Maybe his growing up in openly racist SC made it clear to him that the US was no better than its foes morally. As a person raised Jewish, I bristled at his Hymietown comments, but he was no more an anti-Semite than those whites in SC. I respect that he tried to make things better for his constituents.

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  5. Thanks for a great column.

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  6. Those assholes in Greenville!

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  7. NS: I see you are in the special supplement section of the paper today.

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  8. Someone once said that no prophet is accepted in his hometown.
    Everyone is part saint and part sinner. We each have a choice every day to do good works or take a pass.
    In my opinion, Reverend Jackson used his abilities to do good exceedingly well.

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  9. After reading your excellent piece on Reverend Jackson yesterday,
    I immediately looked up Greenville, South Carolina.
    Wikipedia, the city's website, Chamber of Commerce, the Greenville public library, all of the usual suspects.
    The incident in which he went to the library to check out a book and its aftermath has been completely scrubbed. No mention anywhere.
    We all can learn from our mistakes if we choose to.
    It's apparent that the city fathers of Greenfield have chosen to ignore some uncomfortable things of the past.

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  10. And yet, after Jesse Jackson died, Trump rushed to point out what a great friend he was to Jesse, and how he 'helped' Jesse along the way (sounded like he supported DEI at some point!). I looked up coverage of Jesse Jackson's death in the Greeneville newspaper. 78 photos highlighting his connection to the town. And yes, the photo of the Greenville Eight is proudly included.

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    1. was there any thing on the photo as to why the picture was in the paper

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    2. Sanford- the paper provided a 78-photo montage of Jesse Jackson's ties to Greeneville. Many of the photos were of him visiting his mother (or attending her going-home celebration at the time of her death). The Greeneville Eight Photo was a staged photo of 8 young blacks standing in front of the library, challenging the refusal to allow their entry. All their names were listed. Not clear whether the photo was taken before or after they won their legal challenge to use the library, and no other context was given. My point is that Jesse was a complicated man who left a complicated legacy and those who honor his passing often have complicated responses. Is Greeneville PROUD of their hometown hero, despite their earlier mistreatment of him? For those who faulted him for allowing his ego to intrude... maybe look in the mirror.

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  11. This is utterly beside the point, but the Century Shopping Centre has fared about as badly as many malls from way back when. There's still a fine movie theater and an LA Fitness, but most of the shops along the winding ramp started disappearing quite a while ago.

    With apologies to Frank Sinatra (and everybody else...)

    🎵 Chicago, Chicago, that toddlin' town.

    ...

    On Clark Street, that snark street, I just want to say
    They do things they don't do on Broadway
    They have the time, the time of their life
    I saw a man, he kissed a columnist's future wife
    In Chicago, Chicago, my hometown. 🎵

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    1. Back in the day (80s), my wife brushed against a display of schlocky Christmas dreck that was marked down for quick sale in one of the highest cubbyholes...it was December 26. A slow and quiet Sunday. The party was over.

      The schlockmeister had a hissy-fit and wanted us to pay for the doodads and trinkets she knocked over. Stuff that was undamaged and that was going to be packed away any minute. We laughed and walked away. He followed us down the ramp, and I expected a fight. Until a cop made him walk back up to his store and made me walk down. The Century lost its luster a long, long time ago.

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  12. "White folks tended to make cathedrals with our fingertips and catalogue the flaws." What a great sentence.

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  13. from Charlie Pierce Nobody saw more clearly the direction in which the Republican Party was heading than Jesse Jackson did, and nobody saw more clearly the eventual public policy failures of Democrats seeking to carve off conservative voters who already were in the process of losing their minds. Donald Trump is the creature at the end of that road, and Jesse Jackson, who passed away on Tuesday morning, saw that before many allegedly shrewd political minds did. Sail on, Reverend. You were ... somebody. https://archive.ph/eGCi4#selection-705.0-707.9

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