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Black Political Empowerment Project Pittsburgh founder remembers Rev. Jesse Jackson
Summary
Tim Stevens, founder of the Black Political Empowerment Project in Pittsburgh, reflected on Rev. Jesse Jackson's decades of civil-rights work as reports said Jackson died peacefully at age 84.
Content
Tim Stevens, founder of the Black Political Empowerment Project in Pittsburgh, reflected on Reverend Jesse Jackson after news of Jackson's death. Coverage describes Jackson as a civil-rights leader who rose to prominence as a young protégé of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Stevens recalled seeing Jackson at Pittsburgh International Airport during a campaign visit and called him passionate and "hard to replace." The Rainbow PUSH Coalition and related statements reported that Jackson died peacefully, surrounded by family.
Key details:
- Tim Stevens described meeting Jackson at Pittsburgh International Airport during one of Jackson's campaigns and called him a passionate figure who is hard to replace.
- Jackson founded the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and is widely noted for leading civil-rights efforts after Martin Luther King Jr.'s death.
- Reports said Jackson died peacefully at age 84; he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2017 and was recently hospitalized with a degenerative brain condition.
Summary:
Local leaders' comments underline a sense of loss and the lasting public role Jackson held over many decades. Official statements note his death at 84 and reference his prior health challenges. Undetermined at this time.
