6 March 2026
Chicago 12, Melborne City, USA
Design

Thousands gather to celebrate the life of Rev. Jesse Jackson at Chicago funeral: Live updates

The funeral service honoring Rev. Jesse Jackson began at 11 a.m. at Chicago’s House of Hope in Chicago’s Pullman neighborhood. Scores of people from around the world took their seats at the homegoing to honor the civil rights icon.

What you need to know

The funeral service honoring the civil rights leader began at 11 a.m. at Chicago’s House of Hope.

Who is in attendance? Former Presidents Joe Biden, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama are all expected to be at the funeral. The Jackson family invited President Donald Trump and former President George W. Bush, but it is unclear if they will attend. Former Vice President Kamala Harris is also expected at the service.

Who will perform? Jennifer Hudson, gospel artists Bebe Winans and Pastor Marvin Winans are scheduled to sing. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker will speak.

Listen in now: WBEZ 91.5 is airing live coverage of Jackson’s services. Visit wbez.org and hit the “LISTEN LIVE” button up top.

Joe Biden admired Jackson’s passion

As former President Joe Biden took the stage, he joked, “That clock is wrong.” The crowd laughed

The clock reads a few minutes past 2 pm, which was the target finish time.

Biden described Jesse Jackson as “underrated, undetered and unafraid.”

“We had very different backgrounds, and in some cases different views, but never on race,” he said. “Sometimes we went toe-to-toe and disagreed about issues. But that’s what I admired most about Jesse: his passion. The courage of his convictions.”

Obama takes aim at Trump, says Jackson inspires Americans to be ‘heralds of change’

At the end of his nearly 30-minute eulogy, Obama took a turn and offered up a pointed critique of the Trump administration. He said Americans are living in hard times and “it’s hard to hope,” with each day bringing “some new assault on our democratic institutions, another setback to the idea of the rule of law, an offense to common needs.”

“Every day you wake up to things you just didn’t think were possible. Each day we’re told … to fear each other, to turn on each other and that some Americans count more than others, and that some don’t even count at all,” Obama said. “Everywhere we see greed and bigotry being celebrated and bullying and mockery masquerading as strength. We see science and expertise denigrated while ignorance and dishonesty and cruelty and corruption are reaping untold rewards every day.”

Obama said it’s “tempting for some to compromise with power,” or to simply put your head down.

“But this man,” Obama said pointing to Jackson’s casket, “Rev. Jesse Louis Jackson, inspires us to take a harder path. His voice called on each of us to be heralds of change, to be messengers of hope, to step forward and say, ‘Send me wherever we have a chance to make an impact, whether it’s in our schools, our workplaces, our neighborhoods, our cities, not for faith, not for glory or because success is guaranteed, but because it gives our life purpose.’”

Jennifer Hudson sings “A Change is Gonna Come”

Obama mentions the ‘Joshua Generation’ in the civil rights struggle

Former President Barack Obama mentioned the “Joshua Generation” in his remarks at Jackson’s service — a reference I’ve heard Obama often use through the years.

But I heard it for the first time when Obama used it in a speech on March 4, 2007 from the pulpit of the historic Brown Chaple A.M.E. church in Selma, Alabama. It was during the Democratic presidential primary, and chief rival Hillary Clinton was also speaking in town that day, in another church a few blocks away.

In the context of the civil rights movement, the early fighters for equality were part of the Moses generation. They eventually passed the baton – to the Joshua generation, whose ranks, said Obama, include himself.

As Obama said that day in 2007, “I’m here because somebody marched. I’m here because you all sacrificed for me. I stand on the shoulders of giants. I thank the Moses generation; but we’ve got to remember, now, that Joshua still had a job to do. As great as Moses was, despite all that he did, leading a people out of bondage, he didn’t cross over the river to see the Promised Land. God told him your job is done. You’ll see it. You’ll be at the mountain top and you can see what I’ve promised. What I’ve promised to Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. You will see that I’ve fulfilled that promise but you won’t go there. We’re going to leave it to the Joshua generation to make sure it happens..”

Attendees shout out Michelle Obama, who is not in attendance

Former First Lady Michelle Obama is noticeably absent from the Chicago ceremony, with former President Barack Obama seated next to former President Bill Clinton and former First Lady Jill Biden.

Last year Michelle Obama missed the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter and the second inauguration of President Trump, with former President Obama attending both events alone. Her absence from the Carter funeral even sparked false rumors about a pending divorce.

Michelle Obama tried to clear the air in an April 2025 podcast with the actress Sophia Bush, telling her people “couldn’t even fathom that I was making a choice for myself, that they had to assume that my husband and I are divorcing.”

“I chose to do what’s best for me, not what I had to do,” she said about skipping an event last year.

A spokesperson for Michelle Obama did not immediately respond to a request for comment about her absence.

Jackson reminds Americans of their duty, Obama said

Obama said that in these times, when democracy and decency are assaulted daily, Jackson reminds us of our American duty: “If we don’t step up, no one else will.”

Hyde Park barbershop is glued to Jackson’s service on TV: ‘Everybody has been watching all day’

Jackson ‘belonged on that stage,’ Obama said

Obama talks about watching Jackson’s first presidential debate in 1984 in his New York apartment as a poor college kid. He said that first presidential campaign and Mayor Harold Washington’s campaign for mayor inspired him and ultimately drew him to Chicago.

“When that debate was over, I turned off that TV, and I thought the same thing that I know a lot of people thought, even if they didn’t want to admit it. That in his idea, and his platform, in his analysis, in his intelligence, in his insight, Jesse hadn’t just held his own. He had owned that stage,” Obama said. “He wasn’t an intruder, he wasn’t a pretender. He belonged on that stage. And the message he sent, to a 22-year-old child of a single mother with a funny name, an outsider, was that there wasn’t any place, any room, where we didn’t belong.”

Former President Barack Obama compares Jackson to a prophet

“It’s good to be home,” former President Barack Obama said shortly after taking the stage. A sea of cell phones could be seen recording his words, as attendees gave him a standing ovation.

He then compared Jackson to the prophet Isaiah.

Jackson was “a man who, when the poor and the dispossessed needed a champion and the country needed healing, stepped forward again and again and again and said, ‘Send me.’”

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi: ‘He saw in me something that I didn’t see in myself’

Illinois Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., was 11 years old when he heard Rev. Jackson’s speech at the 1984 Democratic Party convention. He told the Sun-Times it had a profound impact on him.

“I’m a racial religious ethnic minority immigrant with 29 letters in my name. I’m especially sensitive to anybody being otherized and he was the eternal champion for the poor, the immigrant, the person who’s disinherited and disenfranchised,” Krishnamoorthi said.

The current candidate for Sen. Dick Durbin’s soon-to-be open seat added, “And I felt that he saw in me something that I didn’t see in myself when he said that.”

Isiah Thomas calls Jackson ‘Our Nelson Mandela’

NBA Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas drew people to their feet when he acknowledged who, he said, were the five presidents in attendance: Kamala Harris, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Barack Obama.

But it also was a bittersweet reference. Like Jackson’s two historic but unsuccessful White House runs, Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris never reached the promised land.

He recalled growing up in the 1960s in Chicago, listing fallen civil rights heroes such as Medgar Evers and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

He went on to call Rev. Jackson, “Our Nelson Mandela.”

“When society was telling me I was a nobody, when society was telling me we don’t even want to go to school with you, this man walked up to me and my mom … and then he did the unthinkable,” he said. “Mama Jackson, your husband kneeled down, and he looked me in the eyes, and that man said, ‘You are somebody.’”

Thomas wept recalling how Jackson comforted his family when his mother died.

“When we were at our lowest,” he said, “he lifted us up on those broad shoulders.”

Mayor Brandon Johnson says Jackson paved the way for President Clinton, Obama

Mayor Brandon Johnson, a West Side resident, jokingly chided the Jackson family about the lack of West Side representation on the program.

He then shared a story about a conversation he once had where the Rev. Jackson claimed he was a better quarterback than the Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson.

“You know I played that position,” he said Jackson told him. “I was better because of my instincts.”

Johnson added, “It was his instincts that understood that labor and faith were one and the same as Dr. King prophesied. It was his instincts to stand up against school closures and the shuttering of mental health clinics. It was his instincts that led protests down Michigan Avenue when a boy’s life was taken by a police officer and the government tried to cover it up,” Johnson said.

“It was his instincts to run in ‘84 and ‘88 but not in ‘92 to make way for somebody in the deep South and a brother on the South Side to become president of the United States,” he said referring to former presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

You will see him again,” Mayor Johnson promised Jackson’s widow Jackie. “That’s not a promise from a politician, but the Word.”

Reverend Mayor Brandon Johnson!” Rev. James Meeks said after Johnson concluded his remarks, which were reminiscent of a Baptist sermon.

A rainbow coalition filling the House of Hope

Gov. JB Pritzker talks about Jackson’s commitment to justice

“Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream,” Gov. JB Pritzker said, quoting the Bible. “For Rev. Jesse Jackson each day was a new opportunity to bring justice in a too-often unjust world. His ambition was to shape a world where justice was not an anomaly, but a constant.”

“Jesse Jackson was an ambassador of hope for the oppressed, who met with kings and queens and presidents and dictators and clergy of all the great religions,” Pritzker said. “But here in Chicago, he was our neighbor. He was our friend. We were so proud. We are so proud.”

Pritzker said that “even as his body started to fail him, the reverend’s mind remained sharp.”

He added: “While we shared him with the world, Rev. Jackson belonged to Chicago, and Chicago belonged to him.”

‘I intend to die with my shoes on,’ Rev. Jackson said before his death

Jackson was ‘aligned to the moral center’

“He was maladjusted to injustice,” Yusef Jackson said Martin Luther King said about his father.

Yusef Jackson said his father was always aligned to the moral center. “It’s not about the left wing or the right wing. It takes two wings to fly.”

Rev. Jackson’s son Yusef speaks

Jackson’s son Yusef invoked Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, both slain at 39.

“He never thought he would live so long,” said Yusef Jackson.

Rabbi Jacobs: ‘Oh my God, you’re Jesse Jackson! You are somebody!’

“The wisest man of any of us,” said Judge Greg Mathis

“He’s the wisest man any of us have ever known, no doubt,” said Judge Greg Mathis, whose “Judge Mathis” courtroom television series was filmed at NBC Tower in downtown Chicago for its entire 24-year run.

Mathis is Jackson’s godson, and was present in South Carolina earlier this week.

A day of inspirational speeches inspired by Rev. Jackson’s own words

You will hear great inspirational speeches today at the Jackson funeral, especially from former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, whose words are always powerful.

But let’s remember that Jackson is also the gold standard when it comes to speaking, from sermons to political speeches, not that there was always much of a difference.

I just re-read Jackson’s Democratic Convention Speech he delivered on July 18, 1984, during his first White House run.

From the reverend himself … describing his flock, apt words in these chaotic times when the continuation of our democracy as we know it is on the line:

“My constituency is the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected and the despised. They are restless and seek relief. They’ve voted in record numbers. They have invested faith, hope and trust that they have in us. The Democratic Party must send them a signal that we care. I pledge my best to not let them down.

“Leadership must heed the call of conscience, redemption, expansion, healing and unity, for they are the key to achieving our mission. Time is neutral and does not change things. With courage and initiative, leaders can change things.”

And Jackson’s message to young America is worth repeating today: “Exercise the right to dream. You must face reality, that which is. But then dream of a reality that ought to be, that must be. Live beyond the pain of reality with the dream of a bright tomorrow.”

An old friend of Jesse Jackson watches the homegoing from Valois Restaurant in Hyde Park

Gospel singer: ‘One more praise! One more praise!’

The crowd stood and cheered as Hezekiah Walker sang one of his gospel classics. “Every praise is to our God. Every word of worship is to our God,” he sang.

Urging the crowd on, Walker contined: “One more praise! One more praise!”

After Walker finished, Rev. James T. Meeks returned to the podium and jokingly warned the crowd about keeping the service to three hours.

“That’s how services go too long. ‘One more praise. One more praise,’” Meeks said as the crowd erupted in laughter.

Rev. Otis Moss III brought the crowd to its feet

Rev. Otis Moss III, pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ, one of the city’s largest Black congregations, brings many in the crowd to its feet with his prayer for Jackson delivered in the thunderous tone for which he has become known.

“Rev. Jesse Louis Jackson is now an ancestor,” said Rev. Otis Moss III

“We honor the rhetorical genius of a man whose oral dexterity reshaped notions of what is possible,” said Rev. Otis Moss III, senior pastor of Trinity United Church in Christ in Chicago. “May we honor him by speaking truth to power. … Rev. Jesse Louis Jackson is now an ancestor, may we be unfair to tap into his ancestral intelligence.”

Speaker Rabbi Brous is a mentor to Jackson’s daughter Ashley

Rabbi Sharon Brous said, “Our nation can still write a redemption story”

Brous is the founder of IKAR synagogue in Los Angeles. She is a prominent rabbi who, on the second day of the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, delivered the invocation. She has also spoken at events with ex-Presidents Joe Biden, Barack Obama and former Vice President Kamala Harris.

A connection to Jackson is through his daughter, Ashley. Ashley is the daughter born to Jackson and Karin Stanford. Brous told the Sun-Times that she is a “mentor and close friend” to Ashley, who “is a close associate of IKAR and a beloved member of our community.”

Brous said she and Jackson “connected meaningfully over the past couple of years, based on their shared commitment to strengthening multifaith partnerships in the spirit of building a more just and loving world.” Jackson attended shabbat services at IKAR in November, 2024.

Said Brous, in their last meeting, Jackson asked her if he could call Brous “his rabbi.”

Three former presidents enter the hall

“We must never give up on righting the wrongs of the past,” said Rabbi Sharon Brous

Rabbi Sharon Brous of Los Angeles called Jackson “the man who reminded America that we must never give up on righting the wrongs of the past” and prayed we follow the example of “this moral and spiritual giant.” “Forgiveness is always possible,” she said. “When we lead with love we plant the seeds for a world that will be redeemed with love.”

Amid gospel music, celebrities rub shoulders with prominent politicians

Members of the Divine Nine out in full force

Omega Psi Phi member: ‘Rev. Jackson was a very special fallen brother’

Thomas Finch stood outside Gate 4 proudly wearing his Omega Psi Phi jacket and displaying his large, billboard-sized video screen that will broadcast the services going on inside for those still waiting to enter.

Finch said more than 300 of his fraternity brothers attended a special memorial service the fraternity held Thursday night for Jackson, a member of the Omegas since 1960.

“It’s a significant ritual that we have for fallen brothers, and Rev. Jackson was a very special fallen brother. It was very moving. It was really a celebration. We love him, and his legacy will live on.”

Finch said Jackson stayed close to the fraternity throughout his career. Jackson was initiated at the University of Illinois in 1960. Just two years later, he was elected second vice grand basileus, the fraternity’s highest position for undergrad members, Finch said.

“So his abilities were recognized very early, but he still loved the brothers,” Finch said. “Every time we’d see him, no matter the occasion, he throw up the hooks. And he’d give you a hug.”

“We’re going to pack this place and send him off very well,” Finch said.

Poster designer James Hickman hasn’t gotten much sleep

Sen. Durbin: ‘He had me on speed dial’

Rep. Robin Kelly, who took over Jesse Jackson Jr’s House seat, is here

Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts, a Republican, expected to speak later

One name that jumps out among the speakers is Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts. If you wonder about the relationship, well, so did we. “The relationship is really rooted around baseball,” said Dennis Culloton, Ricketts’ spokesperson.

“Rev. Jackson is a baseball fan. He really loved coming to Wrigley Field. He loved coming with his family, and Tom would spend some time with him when he came to the games.

“Tom speculates that [Jackson] also felt connected to Wrigley Field because it is the last ball park still standing where Jackie Robinson played.” Robinson was the first African American to play in the MLB in this era when he started for the Dodgers in 1947.

Ricketts comes from a famous Republican family, with the exception being sister Laura, who is a staunch Democrat. But at games, said Culloton, the talk was about baseball — not politics.

‘I fell in love with him,’ says Mr. T

‘I grew up with him,’ says former Mayor Richard M. Daley

Gwen Haywood was seated by 9 a.m. as attendees started to fill House of Hope.

Thousands, young and old, paid their respects to Jackson at Rainbow PUSH headquarters last week

A piece of Jackson’s past presidential campaign for sale

Rev. Jesse Jackson’s casket arrives at House of Hope

Long lines hours before the homegoing ceremony

Details on Friday’s homegoing service

The Rev. Jesse Jackson comes home to South Carolina, the place that molded the man Chicago knew

Rev. Jesse Jackson, civil rights leader and Chicago icon, dead at 84

First Appeared on
Source link

Leave feedback about this

  • Quality
  • Price
  • Service

PROS

+
Add Field

CONS

+
Add Field
Choose Image
Choose Video