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Solidarity Is Far From Dead
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# : |
11633 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1986 |
2,142 Words |
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Peter Mroczyk Peter Mroczyk is a former national executive of the Solidarity
trade union, now living in the United States and serving as
executive director of the Solidarity Endowment. |
"Many were inclined to write off Solidarity as yet another ineffectual spasm of resistance against the irresistible power of the modern state. But they looked again and the grave of Solidarity was empty."
-Ronald Reagan, November 1985
The recent arrest in Poland of 32-year-old Zbigniew Bujak, one of the leaders of the underground wing of the outlawed Solidarity trade union, was hailed by the Western including American, mass media as the end of Solidarity and the opposition movement in Poland.
Time magazine, for example, ran the story of Bujak's arrest under the headline "A Nail in Solidarity's Coffin."
However, despite the romantic image prevailing in the West of Bujak as a contemporary Robin Hood, he and his colleagues in the Polish underground are extremely pragmatic and practical people, and his arrest will not seriously undermine the activities of the Polish opposition movement.
To understand why the Polish government has been unable to crush Solidarity and the opposition in Poland - despite the wide powers given to security forces during the last five years - one has to understand the Polish version of an underground.
By all estimates there are some 1.2 million Poles currently involved in the operations of the underground. That, of course, does not mean all of them are in
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