CHICAGO — The Rev. Jesse Jackson was profiled by The Associated Press when he was a 41-year-old civil rights activist preparing his historic 1984 campaign for the presidency. The AP is republishing that story, by the late AP writer Sharon Cohen, as it appeared on Aug. 7, 1983.
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He sees himself on the lonely, dusty road of the prophets — a man ordained by the spirit and sent forth like Jesus, Gandhi or the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to show others the way out of the wilderness.
''I'm very much driven by my religion to rise,'' he says. ''There's a push that comes from religious duty. Gandhi couldn't stop. Martin couldn't stop. Jesus couldn't stop.''
Nor, to hear him tell it, can the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson.
''I'm in the prophetic ministry,'' he says. ''It's the kind of ministry ancient prophets engaged in when they challenged the conduct of kings and queens.''
Jesse Louis Jackson — 41-year-old son of the South, child of civil rights and a prospective 1984 black presidential candidate — is a man driven, almost obsessed with his self-appointed mission.
Wherever Jackson goes, his message is hope. His style is rhyme. He is a master of the slogan.