On Air Now

Star FM

10:00am - 7:00pm

Now Playing

Jelly Roll

I Am Not Okay

Former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young: Photographs from the past a reminder that ‘freedom is not free’

Tuesday, February 17, 2026 at 7:06 PM

Civil rights icon Andrew Young issued a blunt warning Tuesday that liberties won during the 20th Century are under threat, but he also said he believes people today have the necessary tools to protect them. Speaking at the launch of a project to digitize 1.8 million Civil Rights Movement-era photographs in Atlanta, the 93-year-old former […]

Former U.N. ambassador and civil rights icon Andrew Young speaks in Atlanta on Feb. 17, 2026, at the launch of the Legacy Line, an initiative focused on preserving Ernest C. Withers’ photographic archive. Alander Rocha/Georgia Recorder

Civil rights icon Andrew Young issued a blunt warning Tuesday that liberties won during the 20th Century are under threat, but he also said he believes people today have the necessary tools to protect them.

Speaking at the launch of a project to digitize 1.8 million Civil Rights Movement-era photographs in Atlanta, the 93-year-old former U.N. ambassador said that freedom is something that needs to be constantly protected. He said that while the photographs around him captured “dangers, toils, and snares” of the past, they could become a reflection of a modern America where many fail to realize that “freedom is not free.”

“You just look at the picture. Just look at it. It could be Minnesota. It could be Atlanta. It could be Chicago, could be Phoenix, it could be anywhere in America and anywhere on the planet where people don’t realize that freedom is not free,” Young said in response to whether he is seeing any parallels between the past and current times. “It’s something you have to organize to protect, something you have to vote to implement, and something that will really determine your happiness and your success in life.”

Former U.N. ambassador and civil rights icon Andrew Young speaks in Atlanta on Feb. 17, 2026, at the launch of launch of the Legacy Line, an initiative focused on preserving Ernest C. Withers’ photographic archive. Alander Rocha/Georgia Recorder

The backdrop to Young’s words of caution was the launch of the Legacy Line, an initiative focused on preserving Ernest C. Withers’ photographic archive, a massive collection of 1.8 million images from the Civil Rights Movement, of which less than 1% has been digitized so far. The event seemed to bridge the past and present, featuring former Atlanta mayors and young “torchbearers,” who were reminded of the struggle through photographs, such as the Emmett Till trial and the bloody marches in the South.

SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

“This is not a study of the past. This is reminding you of how we got to where we are … I still remember and cherish many of those moments, because it reminds us how far we’ve come, but it should also remind us that we can go even further if we have the same vitality, energy and vision that you see in these photographs,” Young said.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens introduces former U.N. ambassador and civil rights icon Andrew Young at the launch of launch of the Legacy Line, an initiative focused on preserving Ernest C. Withers’ photographic archive, on Feb. 17, 2026, in Atlanta. Alander Rocha/Georgia Recorder

Young and other leaders also paid respects to the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who died earlier Tuesday at age 84. Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens led the room in a moment of silence and a powerful call-and-response of Jackson’s “I am somebody” chant before discussing the importance of preserving these visual historical artifacts.

“I grew up hearing the stories of how Atlanta became the cradle of the Civil Rights Movement. These were stories of famous names, but also stories about neighbors, teachers, parents, good old, ordinary people who stepped up in the midst of extraordinary times. Some raised their voices. Some raised their pens and some raised their cameras. But everyone had a part to play,” Dickens said.

Young also discussed his relationship with law enforcement when asked about parallels with recent deadly encounters with immigration enforcement officers. He said that the movement never viewed the police as their enemies, even during the height of the struggle and that he drew on advice from his father, telling himself “don’t get mad, get smart.”

“Don’t let anybody make you lose your temper. He said, ‘your mind is the most powerful weapon you have,’” Young said.

Before leaving the stage, Young encouraged the audience not to be discouraged by challenging situations, saying they often lead to opportunities, specifically pointing to his tenure as Atlanta’s mayor and his push to host the Summer Olympics in 1996.

“Things happen as a result of our interchange and interactions with problems, and a problem is an opportunity to do something better than it’s being done,” Young said.

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

More from GA News

  • Big money and endorsements flow as Georgia primary approaches

    Georgia lawmakers are back home in their districts after adjourning for the year – barring an unscheduled special session to handle unfinished elections business. But while the halls of the Capitol are now largely empty, that hasn’t meant a slowdown in the world of Georgia politics. In this week’s roundup, the money and endorsements are […]

  • Local bookstore challenges Gwinnett County jail over mail policy, citing First Amendment violations

    An Athens-based bookstore is challenging a Gwinnett County jail policy that bars independent booksellers from mailing books to prisoners. In oral arguments presented Thursday in federal court, attorneys for Avid Bookshop claimed that a jail policy allowing shipments only from certain publishers and two major retailers violates the bookstore’s First Amendment right to communicate with […]

  • Data center, PFAS bills were a bust but Georgia environmentalists cheer boost for conservation

    The 2026 legislative session in Georgia started with a wide range of proposals aimed at curbing the recent surge in data center proposals and responding to other environmental or energy concerns. And while most of those bills failed to overcome the last-minute frenzy of negotiations on the last day of session, a couple of proposals […]

  • Three new lawmakers elected to fill vacant state House, Senate seats in Tuesday runoffs

    Voters across Georgia selected three new state legislators Tuesday in a series of special election runoffs aimed at filling vacant seats in the General Assembly.  The newest lawmakers include two Democrats in the House and a Republican in the Senate, and since they are replacing members of their own party, their wins will not shift […]

  • Bookman: Deference to Trump delusion leaves Georgia in election law limbo

    Donald Trump can never admit that he lost an election, anywhere, at any time, under any circumstance. And I’m not just talking about swing states like Georgia. Take California, for instance. In the 2024 presidential election, Trump lost California by 20 points.  No shame in that, right? California is one of the most liberal states […]

Today's Weather

  • Milledgeville

    Sunny

    High: 81°F | Low: 48°F

The Star FM Listener Club

Join The Star FM Listener Club

Schedule

  • Liveline

    7:00pm - Midnight

    Evenings 7p - 12

  • Star Overnight

    Midnight - 6:00am

    All The Hits, All Night

  • Star FM

    6:00am - 7:00pm

    All The Hits, All Day

  • Liveline

    7:00pm - Midnight

    Evenings 7p - 12

Listen on the go!

Download The Star FM app to keep listening, wherever you are! It's available on Apple and Android devices.

  • Available on the App Store
  • Available on Google Play