NEW YORK — Jermaine Jackson says he would like to see Neverland Ranch as his brother Michael's final resting place.
In an interview broadcast Thursday on NBC's "Today" show, Jermaine Jackson also said he wishes he had died instead of his younger brother, and that Michael was "a gift from Allah."
"He went too soon. I don't know how people are going to take this, but I wish it was me," Jermaine Jackson said.
When asked why he felt that way, Jermaine Jackson said he always felt that he was Michael's "backbone."
"I wanted to be there for him. I was there and he was sort of like molded. Things he couldn't say, I would say them. During the trials, during everything ..."
Jermaine Jackson said that when he rushed to UCLA Medical Center last Thursday, where the 50-year-old pop singer was pronounced dead, "I wanted to see Michael, and I wanted to see my brother, and see him there lifeless and breathless was very emotional for me, but I held myself together, because I know he's very much alive."
"His spirit is, and that was just a shell, but I kissed him on his forehead and I hugged him, and I touched him and I said, 'Michael, I'll never leave you. You'll never leave me.'"
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Jermaine Jackson: 'I wish it was me'
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Toledo Symphony, Goshen College choirs in concert Feb. 19
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'Seussical' debuts Friday
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Band's upcoming concert will help keep Goshen festival free
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Lotus returning to its roots for theater benefit
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Comedian Daniel Tosh coming to the Morris April 18
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Caught in the One Act
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‘Laugh Out Local’ festival planned at Bristol Opera House
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Suzy Bogguss concert Feb. 2 in Goshen
Suzy Bogguss grew up in a household where everybody listened to music. The Bogguss family was not uniform in its musical tastes.
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