African Nova Scotian community, church leaders mourn Rev. Jesse Jackson
HALIFAX —
Rev. Jesse Jackson left a lasting impact on Nova Scotia, say leaders of the African Nova Scotian community, and was considered like an extended family member to those he met during a visit to the province in 2009.
Sherri Borden Colley, a longtime Halifax journalist, says getting to interview the prominent civil rights leader in person at the Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia in Cherry Brook, N.S., nearly 17 years ago was one of the most significant moments of her career.
“That connection that we feel, because he was here, I would say he was like an extended family member — especially for our Black clergy who would have met him … so today we are grieving and we are mourning,” Borden Colley said in an interview Tuesday.
