PART I: INTRODUCTION
Solidarity Songs
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Solidarnosc Era in Historical Perspective: Labor
Protests, Polish Communism, and the Soviet Bloc, 1956-1981 by Mark
Kramer
PART II: THE STRIKE
Chapter 2: “The People were the Hero”: Conversation with Jerzy
Borowczak
Chapter 3: The Making of a Solidarity Revolution: Conversation with
Bogdan Borusewicz
Chapter 4: Hoeing the Moon: Conversation with Bogdan Felski
Chapter 5: Moments of Conscience: Conversation with Andrzej Gwiazda
and Joanna Duda Gwiazda
Chapter 6: A Time for my Convictions: Conversation with Aleksander
Hall
Chapter 7: The Morality of Truth: Conversation with Adam Hodysz
Chapter 8: Looking for Alternatives: Conversation with Piotr
Kapczynski and Anna Mlynik
Chapter 9: “We were all equal at the Shipyard”: Conversation with
Zenon Kwoka
Chapter 10: The Revolution that Evolved: Conversation with Bogdan
Lis
Chapter 11: Solidarity of Attainable Goals: Conversation with Jacek
Merkel
Chapter 12: Woman of Iron: Conversation with Anna Walentynowicz
Chapter 13: The Price of Freedom: Conversation with Lech Walesa
Chapter 14: The Soup that Became a Downpour: Conversations with
Krzysztof Wyszkowski and his older brother Blazej Wyszkowski
PART III: THE DEMOCRATIC OPPOSITION
Chapter 15: The Making of NOWA: Conversation with Grzegorz
Boguta
Chapter 16: The Fringe of the Possible: Conversation with Andrzej
Celinski
Chapter 17: The Godfather of the Polish Opposition: Conversation
with Jacek Kuron
Chapter 18: The Spirit of Gazeta Wyborcza: Conversation with Adam
Michnik
Chapter 19: The Solidarity of my Generation: Conversation with
Henryk Wujec
PART IV: THE EXPERTS
Chapter 20: The Berlin Wall Started Falling in the Gdansk Shipyard:
Conversation with Bronislaw Geremek
Chapter 21: Lining Up Democracy: Conversation with Tadeusz
Mazowiecki
Chapter 22: Always Right: Conversation with Jadwiga Staniszkis
PART V: ASSESSMENTS
Chapter 23: The Controversy over Lech Walesa: A Review
Chapter 24: Managing Religion in Communist-Era Poland: Catholic
Priests versus the Secret Police
Chapter 25: Anna Walentynowicz and the Legacy of Solidarity in
Poland
PART VI: APPENDIX
Chapter 26: Chronology
Chapter 27: Declassified Documents from the Russian State Archive
of Recent History Translated and introduced by Mark Kramer
Works Cited
Michael Szporer is professor of communications, arts and humanities at the University of Maryland University College.
Szporer (communications, arts, and humanities, Univ. of Maryland
Univ. College) has put together a collection of 25 eyewitness
accounts of intellectuals and workers who were involved with the
creation of the Solidarity trade union and the advent of the
workers strike at the Gdansk Shipyard in summer 1980. In effect,
the book consists of the author asking questions and recording the
answers of leading participants who organized the first
non-Communist workers union and strike behind the Iron Curtain. The
book is a fascinating and valuable documentary of how a group of
workers and intellectuals formed a workers union in defiance of the
Polish Communist and Soviet-backed government, and then leveraged
the union into a political challenge to the Soviet Bloc.
Surprisingly, the Solidarity leaders did not have the support of
the Polish Roman Catholic Church at first; all they had was their
unity of purpose and their courage. The book has an appendix that
includes a chronology of events and some documents from the Russian
archives related to Solidarity. Summing Up: Recommended.
*CHOICE*
Michael Szporer's Solidarity the Great Workers Strike of 1980
is a fascinating story, told in many voices, of the world's largest
strike to date which signaled the fall of the Soviet empire.
Solidarity's peaceful revolution is the beginning of the 21st
century, a correction of the lie perpetrated by the October
Revolution. It is a story of people mobilizing a nation and taking
down a totalitarian ideology with minimum loss of life. While at
the time I closely followed the ups and downs of the events in
Poland, I found the inside story of the movement that changed our
world very revealing and remarkably human. I highly recommend this
brilliant work to anyone interested in the real history of a major
event that contributed to ending the Cold War.
*Lt. General Edward Rowny, former Chief U.S. Strategic Arms
Negotiator*
Michael Szporer's Solidarity: The Great Worker's Strike of 1980 is
a very valuable contribution to the history of the first successful
anti-Communist movement in the Soviet camp. It consists mainly of
interviews with leading figures in this movement elucidating their
thinking and their moods.
*Richard Pipes, Harvard University*
A marvelous historical record of the great workers’ protest that
led to the downfall of 'workers’ state,' first in Poland, then in
the Soviet Union. Through documents, photographs, and interviews
with leading participants, including Lech Walesa, Michael Szporer
sheds important new light on the Gdansk shipyard strike of August
1980 and the role it played in the collapse of communism.
Solidarity advisor Bronislaw Geremek is correct to conclude
that the Berlin wall 'started falling in the Gdansk shipyard.'
*Michael Dobbs, Washington Post correspondent in Poland and the
Soviet Union, 1980-1991, and author of “Down with Big Brother: The
Fall of the Soviet Empire.”*
Most Americans don't understand how or why the Cold War ended. But
Michael Szporer's definitive book on the brave Polish 'Solidarity'
underground will both inform and inspire them. Pope John Paul II
told the Poles, 'Be not afraid!' and they proceeded to free not
only Poland but all of Eastern Europe.
*Georgie Anne Geyer, syndicated columnist and author of "Predicting
the Unthinkable, Anticipating the Impossible."*
The book is and will be a very important, if not the main source
document on the process of the formation of free trade unions (WZZ)
in Poland in 1980, and the opinion of their leaders on the effects
of creeping, the Polish revolution of 1980-89.
*Polish News*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |