When the Rev. Jesse Jackson announced his second presidential bid in 1988 in Pittsburgh, he saw the campaign as a chance for the country to realize its highest ideals.
''If I can become president," said Jackson, who grew up poor and Black in segregated South Carolina, ''every woman can. Every man can. I'm giving America a chance to make a choice to fulfill the highest and best of an authentic and honest democracy.''
While unsuccessful, the campaign captured the imaginations of countless Americans who were inspired by Jackson, who died Tuesday at 84.
Decades later, generations of young people who watched his historic campaigns or learned about his career have become veteran activists, clergy members, civic leaders and lawmakers. Many say that his unapologetic message of equality and justice informs their work today.
''Here I was, a kid growing up in public housing, and I got to witness this Black man running for president. He gave me a glimpse of what is possible, and he taught me how to say, ‘I am somebody'," said Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia, referring to one of Jackson's slogans adopted from a poem.
Warnock also serves as the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, the congregation once led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The Georgia Democrat said Jackson's example was ''needed now more than ever'' in response to the Trump administration's actions on elections, global affairs and immigration.
''His voice is now silent, but his example is eternal, and that work is left to us,'' Warnock said.
A life of advocacy