President & Chief Executive Officer Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, Inc.
 The Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson, President and Founder of the Rainbow/PUSH
Coalition, is one of America's foremost political figures.
Over the past
thirty years, he has played a pivotal role in virtually every movement
for empowerment, peace, civil rights, gender equality, and economic and
social justice.
Reverend Jackson
has been called the "conscience of the nation" and "the
great unifier," challenging America to establish just and humane
priorities. He is known for bringing people together in common ground
across lines of race, class, gender, and belief.
Born on October 8, 1941 in Greenville, South Carolina, Jesse Jackson
attended the University of Illinois on a football scholarship and later
transferred to North Carolina A&T State University. He attended
Chicago Theological Seminary until he joined the Civil Rights Movement
full time in 1965.
Reverend Jackson began his activism as a student leader in the sit-in
movement and continued as a young organizer for the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference as an assistant to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
He went on to direct Operation Breadbasket and subsequently founded
People United to Save Humanity (PUSH) in Chicago in 1971. PUSH's goals
were economic empowerment and expanding educational and employment opportunities
for the disadvantaged and communities of color. In 1984, Reverend Jackson
founded the National Rainbow Coalition, a national social justice organization
devoted to political empowerment, education and changing public policy.
In September 1996, the Rainbow Coalition and Operation PUSH merged into
the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition to continue both philosophies and maximize
its resources.
Long before national health care, a war on drugs, dialogue with the
Soviet Union and negotiations with the Middle East were popular positions,
Reverend Jackson advocated them. By virtue of Reverend Jackson's advocacy,
South African apartheid and the fight for democracy in Haiti came to
the forefront of the national conscience.
Reverend Jackson's two presidential campaigns broke new ground in U.S.
politics. His 1984 campaign won 3.5 million votes, registered over one
million new voters, and helped the Democratic Party regain control of
the Senate in 1986. His 1988 candidacy won seven million votes and registered
two million new voters and helped to sweep hundreds of elected officials
into office. Additionally, this civil rights leader won a historic victory,
coming in first or second in 46 out of 54 contests. His clear progressive
agenda and his ability to build an unprecedented coalition inspired
millions to join the political process.
As a highly respected world leader, Reverend Jackson has acted many
times as an international diplomat in sensitive situations. In 1984,
for example, Reverend Jackson secured the release of captured Navy Lieutenant
Robert Goodman from Syria, as well as the release of 48 Cuban and Cuban-American
prisoners in 1984. He was the first American to bring hostages out of
Kuwait and Iraq in 1990.
In 1990, in an impressive victory, Reverend Jackson was elected to the
post of U.S. Senator from Washington, D.C., a position also known as
"Statehood Senator." The office was created to advocate for
statehood for the District of Columbia, which has a population higher
than five states yet has no voting representation in Congress.
A hallmark of Reverend Jackson's work has been his commitment to youth.
He has visited thousands of high schools, colleges, universities, and
correctional facilities encouraging excellence, inspiring hope and challenging
young people to award themselves with academic excellence and to stay
drug-free. He has also been a major force in the American labor movement—working
with unions to organize workers and mediate labor disputes. It is noted,
Reverend Jackson has probably walked more picket lines and spoken at
more labor rallies than any other national leader.
A renowned orator,
Reverend Jackson has received numerous honors for his work in human
and civil rights and for nonviolent social change. In 1991, the U.S.
Post Office put his likeness on a pictorial postal cancellation, only
the second living person to receive such an honor. He has been on the
Gallup List of Ten Most Respected Americans for the past ten years.
He has also received the prestigious NAACP Spingarn Award, in addition
to honors from hundreds of grassroots and community organizations from
coast to coast. Reverend Jackson has been awarded more than 40 honorary
doctorate degrees, and frequently lectures at Howard, Yale, Princeton,
Morehouse, Harvard, Columbia, Stanford, and Hampton Universities, among
others.
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