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The Labyrinth of Polish Opposition


Article # : 12920 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 5 / 1987  2,087 Words
Author : Janusz Bugajski
Janusz Bugajski is a research associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. He is coauthoring a forthcoming book, East European Fault Lines: Dissent, Opposition, and Social Activism.

       LETTERS FROM PRISON AND OTHER ESSAYS
       Adam Michnik
       Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987
       350 pp., $25.00
       
        Poland boasts a long tradition of political prison literature, stretching back to the nineteenth-century partitions. Opposition activist Adam Michnik made several contributions recently to this genre in the form of observations, analyses, and reflective essays. A selection of his work has now appeared in English, splendidly translated by Maya Latynski.
       
        Michnik, a thirty-nine-year-old historian released from prison in August 1986 for the second time since martial law, is a prominent political strategist and activist whose ideas have evolved significantly since his turbulent student days in the late 1960s. Initially influenced by party rebels Jacek Kuron, Karol Koczelewski, and the rhetoric of revolution, and imbued with socialist egalitarian ideals, Michnik and his peers adapted themselves adroitly to the logjam of Polish communism in the 1970s. The crushing of workers' protests in 1970 and 1976 made it crystal clear that the regime would not countenance genuine proletarian power or the sudden devolution of the party's "leading role." Michnik, Kuron, and others consequently developed a gradualist approach to loosen the communist stranglehold and established the Workers Defense Committee (KOR) to forge closer contacts between intellectuals and workers. This evolved into a more general campaign for "social self-defense." A revolution by osmosis was proposed, whereby the public would defend basic interests, negotiate compromises, and gradually reclaim various spheres of civil life ... (2000 of 13982 Characters)
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