After Jesse Jackson: Hope and Its Limits
This week, as our country reflects on the life of Rev. Jesse Jackson, much of what is being said is true and significant. He was a consequential figure in the civil rights movement, which, despite decades of ups and downs, and successes and failures, has reshaped American moral life. Jews, and Jewish organizations were also pillars of this movement, intentionally and deliberately so, because of our own history of being on the receiving end of oppression and violence, and because its moral language resonated with our own. We have always believed that our covenant calls us to expand the moral life of the societies in which we live. We have marched. We have advocated. We have built coalitions. That engagement is something to be proud of. But Jewish memory is complicated. We are capable of holding gratitude and discomfort at the same time. That memory must be brought to bear when evaluating the often laudatory tributes that have dominated the narrative since his passing earlier ...