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Solidarity at the Crossroads


Article # : 18431 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 9 / 1990  2,741 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.

       Ten years after its dramatic birth in August 1980 in the shipyards, steelyards, and coal mines of Poland's communist wasteland, Solidarity has reached a critical historical juncture. After surviving the repression of martial law and persistent official attempts to divide and discredit the union, Solidarity itself was thrust into government last year when the Communists were pressured into a new power sharing arrangement to avert a popular revolution. This Polish breakthrough in turn acted as a catalyst for the democratic revolutions that swept across Eastern Europe last fall and that continue to shake the continent's political landscape.
       
        But with the defeat of the common enemy of communism, Solidarity has reached an important turning point. It can no longer continue as a mass movement of opposition, and its leaders and advisers cannot confine themselves simply to trade union work, as they are needed in the arising political institutions. On the other hand, Solidarity does not possess a singular political profile as it combines activists with widely diverging backgrounds, ideologies, and programs. Their long-subdued differences have now erupted to the surface; in the after-math of Marxist-Leninist uniformity, Polish politics have inevitably started to splinter and diversify.
       
        SOLIDARITY DIVIDES
       
        The divisions within Solidarity are not simply programmatic and ideological, but are based on strategic, tactical, and personal disputes within the emerging political elite. In the absence of entrenched democratic institutions, fully legitimate governing bodies, or mass-based political parties, Poland's young democracy will continue to be racked by ... (1998 of 18205 Characters)
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