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I rolled over in bed this morning, turned my laptop on, and read,
"Polish President, 96 Others Dead in Plane Crash".
I was shocked to read that
Anna Walentynowicz is among the dead. I got out of bed and dug up the college paper I wrote about her in 1983, at the height of the Solidarity movement for justice and freedom she helped form.
This is the obituary I just wrote. An obituary with footnotes.
______________
In August 1980, Anna Walentynowicz was a rather dumpy little fifty-year-old widow. In photos of the time, you often see her wearing a mauve polyester paisley dress and carrying a big black handbag, her hair in a granny bun.
She was also a crane operator at the Lenin Shipyards in Gdansk, Poland, a tough town on the Baltic Sea.
Soon to retire from her job, she was fired for trumped up charges that August. The real cause was her ongoing work to form an independent labor union, something the Communist government outlawed.
It wasn't the first time the regime had punished her for her outspokenness.
The first time was in 1953.
Postwar Poland was under the paw of its neighbor the Soviet Union. Like many Polish women, Walentynowicz had gone to work in state-controlled heavy industry. After three years as a welder in the Rosa Luxemburg Brigade, she complained that women weren't receiving equal prize money as production incentives.
Pointing out inequality in the socialist system got her an eight-hour interrogation.
In 1968, the year a Soviet invasion of Prague crushed Eastern bloc hopes of reform, Walentynowicz was fired for speaking out against corruption in government trade unions, the only kind of union allowed.
Two years later, Poland broke out in strikes, protesting the government's enormous hike in food prices.
Walentynowicz described what happend at the Lenin Shipyards on December 15, 1970, called Bloody Tuesday:
"It was horrible. Tanks and trucks with police surrounded the shipyards. When the workers wanted to go out into the street and were told to halt, the shooting erupted. Those who fired were policemen dressed up in soldiers' uniforms. The first victims were right at our gates." [2]
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrSeRK3SZuH9wU4yW6FIqnwY9O-AOjveZbJv6rsGJO0E87y_dmNAcVmzvkl_RtmGb0nwAq3x4y-ryJ5tb-Tw42kSm_CsGpnEIcl45_GVj4wHWN1SwsDOOUytIMG7S43AtnsDtdYm03etI/s400/GdanskDec151970.jpg)
By December 20, the official toll was 45 dead and 1,165 wounded.
Again she was arrested in 1978, this time for her work with Lech Walesa and others to organize independent labor unions. Their group, the Free Trade Union Committee, published the underground newspaper called
Robotnik Wybreza (Worker of the Coast).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEihx4j0NII9lyfsYERNoQQTt8zVYiBhiwu6EyNEkpUJisSb5dBvbUL0LPzQGZ7igN5JFYxowPspM4DkJMsiryZgIj5KaW0nUJLH8Nb08H-cxePC8U3ofyAt1FlFKNG-rHqcL-xZ4R4Ptpw/s400/RUR.jpg)
The English word
robot comes from
robota, which means work or labor, including the slave labor of serfs, in many Slavic languages. It also carries the sense of "drudgery." Czech author Karel ÄŒapek introduced artificial people called robots in his play
R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), in 1920. [3]
The Polish workers' crusades against using people as if they were machines matched Poland's deeply Catholic culture.
In 1979, Pope John Paul II, once Karol Wojtyla of Poland, visited Poland and met with Lech Walesa.
In the pope's nonspecific but nevertheless obvious blessing on the workers' movement, he stated,
"Christ will never approve that man be considered, or that man consider himself, merely as a means of production. This must be remembered both by the worker and the employer...."[4]
On August 6, 1980, management fired Anna Walentynowicz again, just months from her retirement.
In the unjust firing of a well-liked woman, the Free Trade Union Committee found a rallying point.
On August 14, workers walked off their jobs, carrying signs demanding Walentynowicz's reinstatement. The strike committee also demanded a raise in pay and the right to an independent trade union.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaWXAmDoZYNC8xBkJYZ5z5CRKPnoWXdxmgAfzSQm_eeOJGpkAYOD41ylYugTt0IHdsSQ-GPMa_Vu8DJKqmnPcj7QxpWm0WPEPyIE4qEdPiyOIDLxNuysdZhQ40tJHQp93R2xsonOusB6c/s400/anna+w+wlech.jpeg)
Anna Walentynowicz and Lech Walesa, August 1980
On August 16, management agreed to everything. Except the trade union.
Walentynowicz described what happened on that day:
"[Lech] Walesa declared an end to the strike... and the workers started leaving the shipyard.... The workers standing outside from the other factories protested:
'You got your issues taken care of, but what about other people from other factories who were fired? They will be lost!'
What could we do? How could we stop 16,000 people leaving through three different gates?
We ran to the gate and I shouted, 'Let's have a solidarity strike!'
Then Alina [Pienkowka] took action. She stood on top of some barrels, such a close-to-tears girl in a candy pink blouse, and she said:
'We have to help the people from other factories because they won't be able to defend themselves....'
Alina's quiet voice stopped the masses of people. The gate was closed––then another. Six thousand people stayed in the shipyard.
For me, only in that moment did the Polish August begin." [5]
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Walentynowicz was called "the most powerful orator in the whole strike movement." (pictured right) [6]
In an interview with the
New York Times in August 21, 1980, when asked what the main cause of the strike was, Walentynowicz said:
"It is the lying and cheating the government does. The truth must be told to the people––that's the main thing.
We workers are much more sure of ourselves [compared to a disastrous strike in 1970]. In 1970 it was a shout of despair. We went into the streets calling 'we want bread for our work.'
Today our demands are different. We are more humanitarian, more political." [7]
And so the Solidarity--Solidarnosc--movement was born. A blend of workers' revolutionary fervor and Catholic social justice piety--a blend sometimes hard for those of us in the secular West to imagine––Solidarity brought down the Communist government in Poland and was influential in the eventual fall of the Soviet Union itself.
Before that happened, there was at least one more arrest for Walentynowicz. On December 13, 1981, General Jaruzelski declared martial law and put Poland under "state of war" status. Police arrested Soldiarity leaders along with radical priests, intellectuals, journalists, and any other people perceived as threats. Including Walentynowicz, who said:
"There was an old lady in our house, very ill with high blood pressure. I had to take her to the hospital. On the way a car pulled out, some men jumped out and tied my hands behind my back, bundled me into the car and left the old lady standing in the street." [8]
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgFdZYf0ks654ACBBP9xisX1NwbgkiQZ1dtQaZJYGGvKtwUn9aktxlbDIx0kqLjN7nocAWIMp6AoCkF85hPzEYpGY_Iv4q9mDb_E-9nwp7DP6hcLUwG9AO0yM8_5P83Gxgh0-VNRq-gZaI/s400/4_Walentynowycz_Walesa.jpg)
"Anna Walentynowicz with Lech Walesa, 8-29-80" [9]
Relations didn't proceed smoothly between Walentynowicz and Walesa. She felt he made too many compromises, and when Walesa received a Nobel Peace Prize in 1983, she commented,
"I started Solidarity, but the winner was Leshek [nickname for Lech]." [10]
At the time she was doing clerical work and campaigning against alcohol, saying "It's easy to rule a nation that drinks." [11]
Eventually she left Solidarity.
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But Walentynowicz wasn't forgotten. On May 3, 2006, President Lech Kaczyński bestowed upon her the Order of the White Eagle.
Poland's highest decoration since 1705, the
White Eagle was never awarded during the nation's Communist era. It was only given again in 1992, after the fall of communism.
How fitting that a woman of iron should get a cross of gold.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhwyqnhyphenhypheneXstxRo3qEduLsZwoWmzskrn6fS2yUIth-F3CBWsF_ruZpDJd91Ym5C4LrFKXcx52E0xecHzn6ovGAfDeYrPQxI_-yyoyYxLWzaucEsbPrLUX-4LcBCxxMYEbGQrHZcVxdlJRU/s320/katyn+pLAQUE.jpg)
On April 10, 2010, along with President Kaczyński, Anna Walentynowicz was part of an official Polish delegation flying to western Russia to mark the seventieth anniversary of the
Katyn Massacre: the slaughter by Soviet secret police of twenty thousand Polish officers and others in Katyn Forest at the beginning of World War II.
LEFT: Polish soldier at Katyn Memorial [12]
The plane crashed in thick fog, killing everyone aboard.
Former president and Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said, "This is a great tragedy, a great shock to us all."
I wonder if he remembers that mauve paisley dress.
______________________
PostscriptAnna Walentynowicz and Lech Walesa appeared as themselves in
Man of Iron, by Andrzej Wajda. The filmmaker was part of a Polish "cinema of Moral concern."
"It is not exaggeration to say that films played a major role in the struggle for Poland’s independence," says blogger
Venkat SIddareddy in a review of
Man of Iron.
It is because of films that I know who Anna Walentynowicz was.
I went to see
Man of Iron in 1983 and had not a bloody clue what was going on. Distressed at my ignorance, when I saw a course offered that fall on "Postwar Polish Culture," taught by
Wlad Godzich, I signed up.
The paper I wrote: "Anna Walentynowicz, A Polish Woman, a Polish Worker" is one of the few college papers I saved.
(I haven't seen
Strike, a fictionalized story of how Anna Walentynowicz (renamed Agnieszka in the film) provided the spark for Solidarity.
Walentynowicz reportedly did not like how she was portrayed. Now I'm going to watch it anyway.)
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FOOTNOTES
[1] Top photos:
a) Black-ribboned flags for plane crash victims, April 10, 2010, at Poznan, Mickiewicz Square, by Andrzej Monczak; from the gallery at
Gazeta Wyborcza
b) Anna Walentynowicz by
Michal Grocholski/AG 2008-12-05]
[2] Bloody Tuesday: "Catalyst of Poland's Crisis,"
New York Times, August 21, 1980, p. A-12.
Photo: "Gdansk,December 15, 1970," from Andrzej Friszke,
Polska Gierka, [Gierek's Poland], Warsaw, 1995;
found at Anna M. Cienciala, History 557 Lecture Notes:
Poland 1957-1980/81.
[3] Film poster for the Soviet film "R.U.R." after Karel Capek, 1935, from
Wikimedia[4] Pope John Paul II, from Lawrence Weschler,
Solidarity: Poland in the Season of Its Passion, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982
[5] Urszula Wislanka, "The Solidarity Movement: Women's Roles,"
New Women's Times, March 1982, p. 1
[6] "most powerful orator," from Weschler,
Solidarity: Poland in the Season of Its Passion[7] "lying and cheating," from "Catalyst of Poland's Crisis"
[8] "ill old lady": Urszula Wislanka, "The Revolutionary Activities of Polish Women,"
Off Our Backs, April 1982, p. 12
[9] B&W photo of Walentynowicz and Walesa, ©
Harald Schmitt / stern
[10] "I started Solidarity": Wislanka, "Revolutionary Activities"
[11] "a nation that drinks": Ibid.
[12] Katyn Memorial, April 4, 2010, from
Gazeta Wyborcza