Note—Jesse Jackson arrived in Chicago in 1967, the same year I began to come into the City from Skokie for Anti-War marches and SDS style high school community organizing on the far North Side. Jackson was already celebrity famous. I was a quirky White kid of no consequence what-so-ever. Over the years our paths would cross frequently but never personally intersect. I supported him in his two runs for the Democratic Party nomination for President although without much personal influence,
Elegy for Jesse
Rev. Jesse Jackson
Oct. 8, 1941—February 17,2023
He had the most magnificent, awe inspiring
globe of an Afro more perfect than
Don Cornelius, Angela Davis,
Little Michael Jackson, or even
Roberta Flack,
Standing at the pulpit for an Operation PUSH Sunday
in a sharp, colorful polyester shirt
and swaying medallion
rousing the flock as if
the Second Coming was NOW.
I, in a curious/rapturous seat in a
nosebleed recess of the church,
after the Amens! and Hallelujahs!
saw him launch that familiar chant.
I Am Somebody! I Am Somebody!
We responded to the call
with rising fervor.
I Am Somebody! I Am Somebody!
I was unsure if I was,
but had no doubt at all
that he was.
—Patrick Murfin