Poland Prepared by Derek Zarzeczny Based on Personal Perspective

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Transcription:

Poland 1979-1989 Prepared by Derek Zarzeczny Based on Personal Perspective

Content John Paul II Visit to Poland in June 1979 Solidarity Independent Trade Union of Workers Movement 1980-1989 Student Strikes Satirical Radio Programs Martial Law in Poland 12/1981 7/1983 Gnome Revolution Shock Therapy for Polish Economy Conversion End of Communism Contemporary Wroclaw and its Gnomes

John Paul II Visit to Poland in June 1979 Pope John Paul II plan to visit Poland was strongly objected by Soviet government Soviets and Polish communists wanted Pope to have limited contact with Poles, thus travel through country by helicopter. John Paul II visited Warszawa, Krakow, Gniezno, Czestochowa, Wadowice and Oswiecim and celebrated masses with multimillion attendees in each place John Paul II gave very inspiring sermons and statements like : Let Saint Spirit come down and renew face of this Earth Do not be afraid, God is with you Communists in Poland were not able to break Catholic Church after WW II

Solidarity Independent Workers Trade Union Movement 1980-1989 Solidarity strikes started in August 1980, first in Gdansk shipyard, led by Lech Walesa Solidarity Movement had close to 10 million members in September 1981 It was a big and existential threat to communist government in Poland It was spreading through Poland and gaining strength like a fire People were feeling free and enthusiastic, full of hope for the future Common symbol for Solidarity movements members was electrical resistor pinned into clothing in visible spot

Student Strikes Student organization name was NZS Independent Student Organization NZS organized strikes at Universities and Colleges across Poland Strike methods were hunger strikes, occupation of educational facilities and manifestations Foreign exchange students from other Soviet block countries were quickly expelled, to not get the idea of how to break soviet rule Many student leaders were interned, along with university professors and lecturers in internment camps, subject to interrogation and daily hardship

Satirical Radio Programs Radio program 60 minutes per Hour was a satirical broadcast in Wroclaw from 1973 through 1981 Episodes were based on Polish history and situational sketches ridiculing government in a veiled and abstracted way In 1981 communist government in Poland has had enough, shut down this program, and confiscated all audio tapes which could be found, but many recordings were saved by listeners

Martial Law in Poland 12/1981 7/1983 Martial Law was imposed on December 13, 1981, and ended after 583 days on July 22 1983 All TV stations were shut down, no radio broadcasts except one governmental channel, TV screens showed white noise All communication across country was halted, no trains, no buses, no taxis, no flights, no civilian cars were allowed on roads Curfew hours 10 pm to 6am were introduced, people had to stay inside homes All stores and shopping malls were closed

Army and armed police troops ZOMO were patrolling streets and have set up control posts at major cross sections Martial law forces totaled ~ 100,000 troops, 30,000 police, 1800 tanks, and large number of troops carriers Army and police troops were equipped with sharp munitions People were very afraid of hunger and their daily needs 40 people were killed, 4000 imprisoned, 10,000 interned in camps Life under restrictions was very hard WRON, Military Administration Council, was administering whole country and every company had a commissar There was hypothesis that if Gen Jaruzelski did not set martial law, then Russian troops, already stationing on Polish border in force of ~ 200,000 soldiers would invade Poland

Martial Law Rules Curfew from 10pm to 6am Any relocation and moving was forbidden Total censorship of media, phones and letters Rationing of food items ( bread, meat, flour, sugar, butter, oil,..) Rationing of gasoline, personal hygiene items, even toilet paper Numerous military and police checkpoints Military commissars were appointed CEOs of all major and minor companies

Gnome Revolution by Orange Alternative Orange Alternative was organized in Wroclaw by Waldemar Frydrych in 1979 Color orange was chosen from mix of papal yellow and communist red Orange Alternative had Manifesto of Socialist Surrealism Organized street sketches / happenings to make people laugh, and make laughter as a weapon against communist authorities and milicja Members painted anticommunist slogans and attaching picture of smurf / gnome

Orange Alternative Street Actions Marches of Smurfs there was a laughter when police was arresting smurf Save St Nicolas from Police International Women Day dispensing woman s hygiene items Day of the Secret Agent participants played roles of agents, and were interrogating pedestrians, checking documents, flipping trench coat lapels with fake agent badges. It as interesting when real secret service agents intervened

Shock Therapy for Polish Economy Conversion George Soros came to Poland on May 8 1988, and met Political Bureau of PZPR, communist party On December 23 1988 Politbureau agreed to introduce market economy in Poland. After his visit to Poland, George Soros sent his economist Jeffrey Sachs to Poland to set up transformation plan. This plan was to: - trigger hyperinflation ( was 200%, then 500% ), - claim responsibility for hardship on the old economy, - rescue situation by setting salaries fixed, without adjustment for inflation - make state enterprises unprofitable, and sell them at very cheap price - takeover of economy by foreign capital

Shock Therapy Shock therapy started on January 1, 1990. It resulted in huge unemployment, sell off of state companies at bargain prices, invasion of foreign capital doing enormous deals, at the loss to the Polish state Foreign companies were bribing Polish officials to gain entry to the market. Example - Hewlett-Packard paid $4 mln bribe Communist party high rank officials were converting into privileged market economy managers. Polish economists in exile (France, Canada, UK, US) had better transformation plan, preserving Poland s ownership in companies, but were not allowed to participate.

End of Communism In general election, on June 4, 1989, communist party lost power, to more democratic parties. Polish economy transformation plan was approved by IMF in Fall of 1989, with main priorities on lowering inflation, deregulation of the economy, privatization of state enterprises But we know how IMF (which is a private organization) works, it wants country to fall into financial bondage forever There was a reason why Hungary paid off all its IMF loans and kicked agency out of their country.

Contemporary Wroclaw and its Gnomes Wroclaw Old City district is dotted with over 300 gnomes Creator of Orange Alternative, Waldemar Frydrych, sued city for using his symbols without permission, so city changed gnome form a little Following slides contain pictures of selected gnomes

Wroclaw Gnomes

Wroclaw Gnomes

Wroclaw Gnomes

Wroclaw Gnomes

This is the End