
Thousands gather to mourn Rev. Jackson as 1st day of visitation continues
Many people are calling this a chance to be part of a historic moment to honor a man who helped to change the course of history.
Thousands from near and far lined up at Rainbow PUSH Headquarters to pay their final respects to its founder and late leader, the Reverend Jesse Jackson. He died last week at the age of 84 after battling a rare neurological disorder.
"He's up there now and I know he's looking down and saying 'well done' but we still have more to do more to keep marching for," mourner Tracy Bradley said.
His journey as a civil rights leader began under the mentorship of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Mourner Patricia Barbour, who grew up in North Carolina and during segregation, says she remembers watching Jackson's fight for equality.
"He spent a lot of years for the struggle so we can vote, so we can have respect, not to be called out of name, and taught us that you. are somebody. And we are somebody," Barbour said.
For decades, the two-time presidential nominee fought for social justice reform, creating generations of leaders who, today, paused not only to mourn but to remember a legacy they plan to keep alive.
"It's super duper important that we are able to have a legacy for our kids , we just gonna have to make it happen," mourner Dacia Dixon said. "Didn't let anything stop him w him being sick. He still continued to be concerned about the movement. We just have to have that same drive."
The late Reverend Jackson will continue to lie in repose here through tomorrow night before his body is moved and later honored in his home state of South Carolina.








