Al Sharpton has patterned his career so closely after the
Jesse Jackson model that he could be justifiably charged with identity theft.
Like Jackson, he began wearing a Martin Luther King medallion around his neck.
Like Jackson, he started his own civil rights organization. Like Jackson, he
ran for president of the United States. Like Jackson, he now has his own radio
and television shows. And like Jackson, he has become a confidante of the man
who occupies the White House.
At a ceremony last week at Georgetown University to
celebrate Jesse Jackson’s 70th birthday and a half century in the civil rights
movement, Sharpton proved that he not only had studied Jesse Jackson, but the
civil rights movement just as carefully.
“We try to go from ’68 to ’08 – like we leapfrogged from
Dr. King to the president of the United States, Barack Obama,” Sharpton
explained. Much of the progress in Black economic and political development
between the time Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis and the election of Obama
in 2008 should be largely attributed to Jackson, Sharpton suggested.
Jesse Jackson was among the handful of top aides to Dr.
King. When King was killed in Memphis, Ralph Abernathy succeeded King as
president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, but it was Jackson
who assumed the mantle as Black America’s top civil rights leader.
Jackson, who was selected by King to head Operation
Breadbasket in Chicago, challenged major corporations to not only hire more
Blacks, but to expand opportunities for African-Americans to own automobile
dealerships, fast food franchises and provide goods and services to Fortune 500
companies.
Sharpton listed Richard Parsons, former CEO of Time
Warner, and American Express CEO Ken Chenault as beneficiaries of Jackson’s
early work.
“There would not have been anybody in the corporate elite
had it not been a movement led by Jackson to say you can’t put a glass ceiling
on how far we can go,” Sharpton explained. “It wasn’t that Blacks weren’t
qualified to be chairman of major corporations until the ‘80s. There was no
movement that had broken the ceiling.”
Lifting the ceiling from national politics was also part
of the Jesse Jackson legacy. Although other African-Americans had run for
president – including Frederick Douglass, Shirley Chisholm and Dick Gregory –
none were as successful as Jackson in 1984 and 1988.
Georgetown University Professor Michael Eric Dyson, who
organized the appreciation event with his wife, Marcia Dyson, who served as Operation
PUSH Trade Bureau’s first chief of staff, said what many in the audience were
thinking: “Without Jesse Jackson, there would be no Barack Obama.”
The Jackson-Obama relationship turned sour after Jackson
was recorded saying that the then-presidential candidate talks down to
African-Americans and he would like to dismember a certain part of Obama’s
body. While that crude comment hurt Jackson’s standing among African-Americans
excited about the prospect of electing the nation’s first Black president, it
does not alter the fact that Obama would not be in the White House without
Jackson’s presidential campaigns.
Sharpton was uncharacteristically diplomatic in how he
addressed the relationship between Obama and Jackson, noting that after Dr.
King had helped Carl Stokes become the first Black mayor of Cleveland, he was
excluded from the victory celebration.
“The misnomer is that students watching think because you
weren’t at the party that you had nothing to do with the achievement,” Sharpton
said. “Don’t get confused by the invitation list to the party with those who
created what you are celebrating.”
At the tribute to Jackson, he was celebrated for
developing a long list of leaders, including Sharpton, Former Secretary of
Labor Alexis Herman, political strategist Donna Brazile, activist Marcia Dyson,
Assistant Agriculture Secretary Joseph Leonard, Black Leadership Forum
Executive Director Gary Flowers, ACLU Washington Director Laura W. Murphy and
Lezli Baskerville, president of the National Association For Equal Opportunity
(NAFEO).
Rev. Freddie Haynes of Dallas, in what he called an
oratorical thank-you note to Rev. Jesse Jackson, spoke about the impact of
Jackson’s presidential campaigns.
Looking at Jackson, he recalled: “After your speech I was
in the barber shop – and you know how we kick it in the barber shop in the
‘hood – and some brothers were talking about, ‘Did you hear Jesse?’ Jesse.
Jesse. Jesse. And I wasn’t feeling them disrespecting Rev. Jesse Jackson like
that. So I said, ‘Do you know Rev.
Jesse Jackson?’ And the brother jumped right back at me and said, ‘I don’t know
Jesse, but Jesse knows me.’”
Sharpton said Jesse Jackson led the way in urging
children to spend less time in front of TV, curbing violence in the Black
community and getting youth to believe that “I Am Somebody.”
Sharpton stated, “In many ways, I would say that from the
economic fights from the end of the decade he started in the ‘70s to the
political empowerment that resulted in the first Black attorney general and the
first Black president to the whole concept of coalition building, he has defined
the last part of the 20th century and the first part of the 21st century.”
Michael Eric Dyson put it this way: “Like Muhammad Ali,
he shook up the world.”
George E. Curry,
former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a
keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web
site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.
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