fbpx
Wikipedia

Lech Wałęsa

Lech Wałęsa[a][b] (born 29 September 1943) is a Polish statesman, dissident, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who served as the president of Poland between 1990 and 1995. After winning the 1990 election, Wałęsa became the first democratically elected president of Poland since 1926 and the first-ever Polish president elected by popular vote. A shipyard electrician by trade, Wałęsa became the leader of the Solidarity movement, and led a successful pro-democratic effort, which in 1989 ended Communist rule in Poland and ushered in the end of the Cold War.

Lech Wałęsa
Wałęsa in 2019
President of Poland
In office
22 December 1990 – 22 December 1995
Prime MinisterTadeusz Mazowiecki
Jan Krzysztof Bielecki
Jan Olszewski
Waldemar Pawlak
Hanna Suchocka
Waldemar Pawlak
Józef Oleksy
Preceded byWojciech Jaruzelski (in country)
Ryszard Kaczorowski (in exile)
Succeeded byAleksander Kwaśniewski
Personal details
Born (1943-09-29) 29 September 1943 (age 80)
Popowo, Poland
Political partySolidarity (1980–1988)
Solidarity Citizens' Committee (1988–1993)
Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms (1993–1997)
Solidarity Electoral Action (1997–2001)
Christian Democracy of the Third Polish Republic (1997–2001)
Spouse
(m. 1969)
Children8, including Jarosław
AwardsFull list
Signature

While working at the Lenin Shipyard (now Gdańsk Shipyard), Wałęsa, an electrician, became a trade-union activist, for which he was persecuted by the government, placed under surveillance, fired in 1976, and arrested several times. In August 1980, he was instrumental in political negotiations that led to the ground-breaking Gdańsk Agreement between striking workers and the government. He co-founded the Solidarity trade-union, whose membership rose to over ten million.

After martial law in Poland was imposed and Solidarity was outlawed, Wałęsa was again arrested. Released from custody, he continued his activism and was prominent in the establishment of the Round Table Agreement that led to the semi-free 1989 Polish legislative election and a Solidarity-led government. He presided over Poland's transition from Marxist–Leninist state socialism into a free-market capitalist liberal democracy, but his active role in Polish politics diminished after he narrowly lost the 1995 Polish presidential election. In 1995, he established the Lech Wałęsa Institute.

Since 1980, Wałęsa has received hundreds of prizes, honors and awards from multiple countries and organizations worldwide. He was named the Time Person of the Year (1981) and one of Time's 100 most important people of the 20th century (1999). He has received over forty honorary degrees, including from Harvard University and Columbia University, as well as dozens of the highest state orders, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, and the French Grand Cross of Legion of Honour. In 1989, Wałęsa was the first foreign non-head of state to address the Joint Meeting of the U.S. Congress. The Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport has borne his name since 2004.[1]

Early life

Wałęsa was born in Popowo, Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia, Germany (German-occupied Poland).[2] His father, Bolesław Wałęsa (1908–1945), was a carpenter who was rounded up and interned in a forced labour camp at Młyniec (outpost of KL Stutthof) by the German occupying forces before Lech was born.[c] Bolesław returned home after the war but died two months later from exhaustion and illness.[4] Lech's mother, Feliksa Wałęsa (née Kamieńska; 1916–1975),[5] has been credited with shaping her son's beliefs and tenacity.[6]

When Lech was nine, Feliksa married her brother-in-law, Stanisław Wałęsa (1916–1981), a farmer.[7] Lech had three elder full siblings; Izabela (1934–2012),[d] Edward (born 1937), and Stanisław (born 1939); and three younger half-brothers; Tadeusz (born 1946), Zygmunt (born 1948), and Wojciech (1951–1988).[8] In 1973, Lech's mother and stepfather emigrated to the US for economic reasons.[7] They lived in Jersey City, New Jersey, where Feliksa died in a car accident in 1975, and Stanisław died of a heart attack in 1981.[7] Both of them were buried in Poland.[8]

In 1961, Lech graduated from primary and vocational school in nearby Chalin and Lipno as a qualified electrician. He worked as a car mechanic from 1961 to 1965, and then embarked on his two-year, obligatory military service, attaining the rank of corporal before beginning work on 12 July 1967 as an electrician at Lenin Shipyard (Stocznia Gdańska im. Lenina), now called Gdańsk Shipyard (Stocznia Gdańska) in Gdańsk.[9]

Solidarity movement

From early in his career, Wałęsa was interested in workers' concerns; in 1968 he encouraged shipyard colleagues to boycott official rallies that condemned recent student strikes.[10] He was a charismatic leader,[11] who helped organize the illegal 1970 protests at the Gdańsk Shipyard when workers protested the government's decree raising food prices and he was considered for the position of chairman of the strike committee.[2][10] The strikes' outcome, which involved the deaths of over 30 workers, galvanized Wałęsa's views on the need for change.[10] In June 1976, Wałęsa lost his job at the Gdańsk Shipyard because of his continued involvement in illegal unions, strikes, and a campaign to commemorate the victims of the 1970 protests.[2][10][12] Afterwards, he worked as an electrician for several other companies but his activism led to him continually being laid off and he was jobless for long periods.[10] Wałęsa and his family were under constant surveillance by the Polish secret police; his home and workplace were always bugged.[10] Over the next few years, he was arrested several times for participating in dissident activities.[2]

 
Wałęsa during the strike at the Lenin Shipyard, August 1980

Wałęsa worked closely with the Workers' Defence Committee (KOR), a group that emerged to lend aid to people arrested after the 1976 labor strikes and to their families.[2] In June 1978, he became an activist of the underground Free Trade Unions of the Coast (Wolne Związki Zawodowe Wybrzeża).[12] On 14 August 1980, another rise in food prices led to a strike at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk, of which Wałęsa was one of the instigators. Wałęsa climbed over the shipyard fence and quickly became one of the strike leaders.[2][10] The strike inspired other similar strikes in Gdańsk, which then spread across Poland. Wałęsa headed the Inter-Enterprise Strike Committee, coordinating the workers at Gdańsk and at 20 other plants in the region.[2] On 31 August, the government, represented by Mieczysław Jagielski, signed an accord (the Gdańsk Agreement) with the Strike Coordinating Committee.[2] The agreement granted the Lenin Shipyard workers the right to strike and permitted them to form an independent trade union.[13] The Strike Coordinating Committee legalized itself as the National Coordinating Committee of the Solidarność (Solidarity) Free Trade Union, and Wałęsa was chosen as chairman of the committee.[2][12] The Solidarity trade union quickly grew, ultimately claiming over 10 million members—more than a quarter of Poland's population.[14] Wałęsa's role in the strike, in the negotiations, and in the newly formed independent trade union gained him fame on the international stage.[2][10]

 
Wałęsa signs autographs during the strike in August 1980.

On 10 March 1981, through the introduction of his former superior in the army, Wałęsa met Wojciech Jaruzelski for the first time in the office building of the Council of Ministers for three hours. During the meeting, Jaruzelski and Wałęsa agreed that mutual trust was necessary if the problems of Poland were to be solved. Wałęsa said "It's not the case that the name of socialism is bad. Only some people spoiled the name of socialism". He also complained about and criticized the government. Jaruzelski informed Wałęsa of the coming war games of the Warsaw Pact from 16 to 25 March, hoping he could help maintain the social order and avoid anti-Soviet remarks. Jaruzelski also reminded Wałęsa that Solidarity had used foreign funds. Wałęsa joked "We don't have to take only dollars. We can take corn, fertilizer, anything is okay. I told Mr. Kania before that I would take everything from the enemy. The more the better, until the enemy was weakened no more".[15][16]

Wałęsa held his position until 13 December 1981, when General Jaruzelski declared martial law in Poland.[2] Wałęsa and many other Solidarity leaders and activists were arrested; he was incarcerated for 11 months until 14 November 1982 at Chylice, Otwock, and Arłamów; eastern towns near the Soviet border.[10][12] On 8 October 1982, Solidarity was outlawed.[17] In 1983, Wałęsa applied to return to the Gdańsk Shipyard as an electrician.[10] The same year, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[2] He was unable to accept it himself, fearing Poland's government would not let him back into the country.[2][10] His wife Danuta accepted the prize on his behalf.[2][10]

Through the mid-1980s, Wałęsa continued underground Solidarity-related activities.[18] Every issue of the leading underground weekly publication Tygodnik Mazowsze bore his motto, "Solidarity will not be divided or destroyed".[19] Following a 1986 amnesty for Solidarity activists,[20] Wałęsa co-founded the Provisional Council of NSZZ Solidarity (Tymczasowa Rada NSZZ Solidarność), the first overt legal Solidarity entity since the declaration of martial law.[18] From 1987 to 1990, he organized and led the semi-illegal Provisional Executive Committee of the Solidarity Trade Union. In mid-1988, he instigated work-stoppage strikes at the Gdańsk Shipyard.[18] He was frequently hauled in for interrogations by the Polish secret police, the Security Service, during the 1980s. On many of these occasions, Danuta—who was even more anti-Communist than her husband—was known to openly taunt Security Service agents when they picked Lech up.[21]

After months of strikes and political deliberations, at the conclusion of the 10th plenary session of the Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR, the Polish Communist party), the government agreed to enter into Round Table Negotiations that lasted from February to April 1989.[2] Wałęsa was an informal leader of the non-governmental side in the negotiations.[12] During the talks, he traveled throughout Poland giving speeches in support of the negotiations.[2] At the end of the talks, the government signed an agreement to re-establish the Solidarity Trade Union and to organize semi-free elections to the Polish parliament; in accordance with the Round Table Agreement, only members of the Communist party and its allies could stand for 65 percent of the seats in the lower house, the Sejm.[2][14][22][23]

In December 1988, Wałęsa co-founded the Solidarity Citizens' Committee;[12] this was ostensibly an advisory body but in practice a political party that won the parliamentary elections in June 1989. Solidarity took all the seats in the Sejm that were subject to free elections, and all but one seat in the newly re-established Senate.[24] Wałęsa was one of Solidarity's most public figures; he was an active campaigner, appearing on many campaign posters, but did not run for parliament himself.[2] Solidarity winners in the Sejm elections were referred to as "Wałęsa's team" or "Lech's team" because they had all appeared on their election posters with Wałęsa.[25][26]

While ostensibly only chairman of Solidarity, Wałęsa played a key role in practical politics. In August 1989, he persuaded leaders of parties formerly allied with the Communist party to form a non-Communist coalition government—the first non-Communist government in the Soviet Bloc. The parliament elected Tadeusz Mazowiecki as the first non-Communist Prime Minister of Poland in over forty years.[14]

Presidency

 
President Bush meets privately with Wałęsa, November 1989.

Following the June 1989 parliamentary elections, Wałęsa was disappointed that some of his former fellow campaigners were satisfied to govern alongside former Communists.[14] He decided to run for the newly re-established office of president, using the slogan, "I don't want to, but I have to" ("Nie chcę, ale muszę.").[2][14] On 9 December 1990, Wałęsa won the presidential election, defeating Prime Minister Mazowiecki and other candidates to become Poland's first freely elected head of state in 63 years, and the first non-Communist head of state in 45 years.[10] In 1993, he founded his own political party, the Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms (BBWR); the grouping's Polish-language acronym echoed that of Józef Piłsudski's "Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government," of 1928–35, likewise an ostensibly non-political organization.[27]

During his presidency, Wałęsa saw Poland through privatization and transition to a free-market economy (the Balcerowicz Plan), Poland's 1991 first completely free parliamentary elections, and a period of redefinition of the country's foreign relations.[2][11] He successfully negotiated the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Poland and won a substantial reduction in foreign debts.[10] Wałęsa supported Poland's entry into NATO and the European Union, both of which occurred after his presidency, in 1999 and 2004, respectively.[10] In the early 1990s, he proposed the creation of a sub-regional security system called NATO bis. The concept was supported by right-wing and populist movements in Poland but garnered little support abroad; Poland's neighbors, some of which (e.g. Lithuania), had recently regained independence and tended to see the proposal as Polish neo-imperialism.[14][28]

Wałęsa has been criticized for a confrontational style and for instigating "war at the top", whereby former Solidarity allies clashed with one another, causing annual changes of government.[11][14][19][29][30] This increasingly isolated Wałęsa on the political scene.[31] As he lost political allies, he came to be surrounded by people who were viewed by the public as incompetent and disreputable.[19][31] Mudslinging during election campaigns tarnished his reputation.[2][32] Some thought Wałęsa, an ex-electrician with no higher education, was too plain-spoken and too undignified for the post of president.[11][14][33] Others thought him too erratic in his views[14][30][34] or complained he was too authoritarian and that he sought to strengthen his own power at the expense of the Sejm.[14][30][31][33] Wałęsa's national security advisor Jacek Merkel credited the shortcomings of Wałęsa's presidency to his inability to comprehend the office of the president as an institution. He was an effective union leader capable of articulating what the workers felt but as president he had difficulty delegating power or navigating bureaucracy.[35][clarification needed] Wałęsa's problems were compounded by the difficult transition to a market economy; in the long run it was seen as highly successful but it lost Wałęsa's government much popular support.[30][31][36]

Wałęsa's BBWR performed poorly in the 1993 parliamentary elections; at times his popular support dwindled to 10 percent and he narrowly lost the 1995 presidential election, winning 33.11 percent of the vote in the first round and 48.28 percent in the run-off against Aleksander Kwaśniewski, who represented the resurgent Polish post-Communist Democratic Left Alliance (SLD).[2][14][31] Wałęsa's fate was sealed by his poor handling of the media; in televised debates he appeared incoherent and rude; in response to Kwaśniewski's extended hand at the end of the first of the two debates, he replied that the post-Communist leader could "shake his leg".[31] After the election, Wałęsa said he was going into "political retirement" and his role in politics became increasingly marginal.[29][37][38]

Post-presidency

 
Wałęsa giving a speech at the Legislative Yuan in Taiwan in 1996

After losing the 1995 election, Wałęsa announced he would return to work as an electrician at the Gdańsk Shipyard.[39] Soon afterwards, he changed his mind and chose to travel around the world on a lecture circuit.[40] Wałęsa developed a portfolio of three lectures ("The Impact of an Expanded NATO on Global Security", "Democracy: The Never-Ending Battle" and "Solidarity: The New Millennium"), and reads them at universities and public events with an appearance fee of around £50,000 ($70,000).[41][42][43]

In 1995, he founded the Lech Wałęsa Institute[44], a think tank with a mission "to popularize the achievements of Polish Solidarity, educate young generations, promote democracy, and build civil society in Poland and around the world".[44][45] In 1997, he founded a new party, Christian Democracy of the Third Polish Republic, hoping it would help him to successfully run in future elections.[46] Wałęsa's contention for the 2000 presidential election ended with a crushing defeat when he polled 1.01 percent of the vote.[47][48] His humiliation was increased because Aleksander Kwaśniewski, who was re-elected in the first round with 54 percent of the vote, is a former Communist apparatchik.[47] Wałęsa polled in seventh place,[47] after which he announced his withdrawal from Polish politics.[49]

In 2006, Wałęsa quit Solidarity in protest of the union's support of the ruling right-wing Law and Justice party, and Lech and Jarosław Kaczyński—twin brothers who had been prominent in Solidarity and were now serving as the country's president and prime minister, respectively.[50] The main point of disagreement was the Kaczyńskis' focus on rooting out those who had been involved in Communist rule and their party's attempt to make public all the files of the former Communist secret police.[50] Until then only members of the government and parliament had to declare any connection with the former security services.[51] Wałęsa and his supporters argued the so-called transparency legislation advocated by the government might turn into a witch hunt and the more than 500,000 Poles who had possibly collaborated with the Communist secret police could face exposure.[51]

 
Wałęsa speaks at a tourism trade fair in Berlin, 2011.
 
Wałęsa speaks on VIII European Economic Forum, 2015.

Political views

In 2011, Wałęsa rejected Lithuania's Order of Vytautas the Great as a result of constant discrimination on the part of the Lithuanian government towards its Polish minority.[52] Wałęsa was well known for his conservative stance on LGBT rights. In 2013, he said on Polish television that "he doesn't wish for this minority, which he tolerates and understands, to impose itself on the majority".[53]

Referring to Robert Biedroń, he argued that, considering that as they represent less than one percent of the Polish society, proportionally speaking, homosexual MPs should sit "in the last row of the parliament, or even behind its walls". After sharp international criticism, including City authorities of San Francisco's decision to rename Walesa Street as a result of those remarks, Wałęsa apologized for his comments, stressing that "being a man of old date, in his view one's sexual orientation should lie in one's intimate sphere".[54][55] He said that "his intentions were distorted by the media" and "homosexuality should be respected".[56] Over the following years, Wałęsa's views shifted, and he has voiced his support for the introduction of same-sex marriage in Poland and has repeatedly met with Biedroń, whom he called "a talent" and "a future president of Poland".[57][58][59]

In 2013, Wałęsa suggested the creation of a political union between Poland and Germany.[60] In 2014, in a widely publicized interview, Wałęsa expressed his disappointment in another Nobel laureate, US president Barack Obama: he told CNN, "When he was elected there was great hope in the world. We were hoping that Obama would reclaim moral leadership for America, but that failed ...  in terms of politics and morality America no longer leads the world".[61] Wałęsa also accused Obama of not deserving his Nobel Peace Prize;[62] during the 2012 US presidential campaign he endorsed Obama's opponent Mitt Romney.[63]

In September 2015, Wałęsa, referring to the migrant crisis in Europe, said: "watching the refugees on television, I noticed that ... they are well fed, well dressed and maybe even are richer than we are ... If Europe opens its gates, soon millions will come through and while living among us will start exercising their own customs, including beheading".[62] In August 2017, ten Nobel Peace Prize laureates, including Wałęsa, urged Saudi Arabia to stop the executions of 14 young people for participating in the 2011–12 Saudi Arabian protests.[64]

Wałęsa and secret police

Despite the 2000 ruling of a special lustration court affirming his innocence, for many years there have been allegations that Wałęsa was an informant of the Security Service of the Polish People's Republic (Służba Bezpieczeństwa or SB), the Communist security services, in his twenties.[65] In his 2002 book titled The Polish Revolution: Solidarity, British historian Timothy Garton Ash writes that Wałęsa, while vehemently denying being a regular Security Service informer, admitted that he had "signed something" under interrogation in the 1970s.[66]: 378  In 2008, a book written by historians Sławomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk titled SB a Lech Wałęsa. Przyczynek do biografii (SB and Lech Wałęsa. Contribution to biography) purported to show that Wałęsa, codenamed Bolek, had been an operative for the security services from 1970 to 1976.[50]

The issue of Wałęsa's alleged collaboration with the communist regime resurfaced again in February 2016, when the Institute of National Remembrance seized materials from the widow of Czesław Kiszczak, former minister of the Minister of Interior, that were said to document Wałęsa's role as a spy for the security services.[50] In 2017, a handwriting study ordered by the government-controlled Institute of National Remembrance (INR), stated that signatures on several documents from the 1970s belonged to Wałęsa.[67] The exact nature of Wałęsa's relationship with Security Service continues to be a source of scholarly debate among historians.[68][69]

2000 Lustration Court ruling

On 12 August 2000, Wałęsa, who was running a presidential campaign at the time, was cleared by the special Lustration Court of charges that he collaborated with the Communist-era secret services and reported on the activities of his fellow shipyard workers, due to the lack of evidence.[70] Anti-Communists Piotr Naimski, one of the first members of the Workers' Defense Committee that led to the Solidarity trade union, and Antoni Macierewicz, Wałęsa's former Interior Minister, testified against him in the closed vetting trial. Naimski, who said he testified with a "heavy heart", expressed his disappointment that Wałęsa "made a mistake by not going openly to the public, and he has missed an important chance".[70] According to Naimski, the court cleared Wałęsa on "technical grounds" because it did not find certain original documents—many of which had been destroyed since 1989—that offered sufficient proof that Wałęsa was lying.[70]

In 1992, Naimski, as a head of the State Protection Office, started the process of screening people suspected of being Communist collaborators in Poland.[70] In June that year, he helped Antoni Macierewicz prepare a list of 64 members of the government and parliament who were named as spies in the police records; these included Wałęsa, then the Polish president.[70] Wałęsa's name was included on the list after a wrenching internal debate about the virtues of honesty versus political discretion.[70] In response to the publication of this list, President Wałęsa immediately engineered the fall of prime minister Jan Olszewski and the dismissal of Interior Minister Macierewicz.[71] A parliamentary committee later concluded Wałęsa had not signed an agreement with the secret police.[70]

A 1997 Polish law made vetting a requirement for those seeking high public office. According to the law, it is not a crime to have collaborated, but those who deny it and are found to have lied are banned from political life for ten years. The 2000 presidential election was the first use of this law.[70] Despite helping Wałęsa in 2005 to receive the official status of a "victim of communist regime" from the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN),[72] this court ruling did not convince many Poles.[70] In November 2009, Wałęsa sued the president of Poland, Lech Kaczyński, over his repeated collaboration allegations.[73] Five months later, Kaczyński failed to invite Wałęsa to the commemoration service at Katyn, which almost certainly saved Wałęsa's life because the presidential plane crashed, killing all on board.[74] In August 2010, Wałęsa lost a libel case against Krzysztof Wyszkowski, his former fellow activist, who also publicly accused Wałęsa of being a Communist agent in 1970s.[75][76]

SB and Lech Wałęsa. A contribution to biography (2008)

The most comprehensive analysis of Wałęsa's possible collaboration with secret police was provided in a 2008 book SB a Lech Wałęsa. Przyczynek do biografii [pl] (SB and Lech Wałęsa. Contribution to biography).[77] The book was written by two historians from the Institute of National Remembrance, Sławomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk, and included documents from the archives of the secret police that were inherited by the institute.[78] Among the documents were registration cards, memos, notes from the secret police, and reports from the informant.[79][80]

The book's authors argue that Wałęsa, working under the code name Bolek,[e] was a secret police informant from 1970 (after being released from jail) until 1976 (before he was fired from the shipyard).[81] According to the authors, "he wrote reports and informed on more than 20 people and some of them were persecuted by the Communist police. He identified people and eavesdropped on his colleagues at work while they were listening to Radio Free Europe for example".[82] The book describes the fate of seven of his alleged victims; information regarding others was destroyed or stolen from the files.[78] According to them, Wałęsa received over 13,000 zlotys as remuneration for his services from the Security Service, while the monthly salary at the time was about 3,500 zlotys.[f][84][85] The authors said oppositionist activity in Poland in the first half of 1970s was minimal and Wałęsa's role in it was quite marginal.[80] However, according to the book, despite formally renouncing his ties with Security Service in 1976, Wałęsa went on to have contacts with Communist officials.[86]

The authors also claim that during his 1990–1995 presidency, Wałęsa used his office to destroy the evidence of his collaboration with the secret police by removing incriminating documents from the archives.[80] According to the book, historians discovered that with the help of the state intelligence agency, Wałęsa, Interior Minister Andrzej Milczanowski, and other members of Wałęsa's administration had borrowed from the archives the secret police files that had connections to Wałęsa, and returned them with key pages removed.[78][84] When it was discovered at the turn of 1995/96, the following prosecutorial inquiry was discontinued for political reasons despite the case attracting much public attention.[75][84]

Sławomir Cenckiewicz also said that in 1983, when Wałęsa was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, the secret police tried to embarrass him and leaked information about Wałęsa's previous collaboration with the government. By this time though, Wałęsa was already so popular that most Poles did not believe the official media and dismissed the allegations as a manipulation by the Communist authorities.[78] The book's first print run sold out in Poland within hours.[87][88] The book received substantial coverage in the media, provoked nationwide debate, and was noted by the international press.[89][90][91] Wałęsa vowed to sue the authors but never did.[88]

Kiszczak archives

On 18 February 2016, the government-affiliated INR in Warsaw announced it had seized a package of original documents that allegedly proved Wałęsa was a paid Security Service informant.[92][67] The documents dated from the period 1970–1976; they were seized from the home of a recently deceased former interior minister, General Czesław Kiszczak.[93] The documents' authenticity was confirmed by an archival expert,[93][94] but the prosecutors demanded a handwriting examination.[95] Eventually, the requested examination concluded that the documents were authentic, which suggest he was a paid informant.[67] Wałęsa previously said that he had signed a commitment to inform document, but that he had never acted on it.[67]

 
Signature Lech Wałęsa-Bolek on the collaboration agreement with Security Service from the Kiszczak archives

The dossier consists of two folders. The first is a "personal file" containing 90 pages of documents, including a handwritten commitment to cooperate with Polish Security Service dated 21 December 1970,[96] and signed Lech Wałęsa – Bolek with a pledge he would never admit his collaboration with secret police "not even to family";[97] the file also contains the confirmations of having received funds.[92][93] The second is a "work file" which contains 279 pages of documents, including numerous reports by Bolek on his co-workers at Gdańsk Shipyard, and notes by Security Service officers from meetings with him.[92][93] According to one note, Wałęsa agreed to collaborate out of fear of persecution after the workers' protest in 1970.[96] The documents also show that at first Bolek eagerly provided information on the opinions and actions of his co-workers and took money for the information, but his enthusiasm diminished and the quality of his information decreased until he was deemed no longer valuable and collaboration with him was terminated in 1976.[96]

The sealed dossier also contained a letter, hand-written by Kiszczak in April 1996, in which he informs the Director of the Polish Central Archives of Modern Records (Archiwum Akt Nowych) about the accompanying files documenting the collaboration of Wałęsa with the Polish Security Service and asks him not to publish this information until five years after Wałęsa's death.[97] In his letter, Kiszczak said he kept the documents out of reach: before the 1989 revolution, trying to protect Wałęsa's reputation; and afterwards to make sure they did not disappear or were used for political reasons.[97] This letter and the accompanying documents had never been sent.[93]

On 16 February 2016, about three months after Kiszczak's death, his widow Maria approached the Institute of National Remembrance and offered to sell the documents to the archives for 90,000 zlotys ($23,000).[98] However, according to Polish law, all documents of the political police must be handed in to the state.[98] The administration of the institute notified the prosecutor's office, which conducted a police search of the Kiszczaks' house and seized all the historic documents.[98] Maria Kiszczak later said she had not read her husband's letter and had "made a mistake".[99]

Wałęsa's response

For years, Wałęsa vehemently denied collaborating with the Polish Security Service and dismissed the incriminating files as forgeries created by the Security Service to compromise him.[100] Wałęsa also denies that during his presidency he removed documents incriminating him from the archives.[84] Until 2008, he denied having ever seen his Security Service file.[84] After the publication of the book SB a Lech Wałęsa in 2008, he said that while he was president "I did borrow the file, but didn't remove anything from it. I saw there were some documents there about me and that they were clearly forgeries. I told my secretaries to tape up and seal the file. I wrote 'don't open' on it. But someone didn't obey, removed the papers, now casting suspicion on me."[84][85] Wałęsa's interior minister Andrzej Milczanowski denied the cover-up and said he "had full legal rights to make those documents available to President Wałęsa" and that "no original documents were removed from the file", which contained only photocopies.[84]

Wałęsa has offered conflicting statements regarding the authenticity of the documents.[97] Initially he appeared to come close to an admission, saying in 1992, "in December 1970, I signed three or four documents"[75][101] to escape from the secret police.[97] In his 1987 autobiography A Way of Hope,[102] Wałęsa said, "It is also the truth that I had not left that clash completely pure. They gave me a condition: sign! And then I signed."[75] He denied he acted upon the collaboration agreement.[103] However, in his later years Wałęsa said all the documents are forgeries and told the BBC in 2008, "you will not find any signature of mine agreeing to collaborate anywhere".[82][92]

In 2009, after the publication of another biography connecting him with the secret police (Lech Wałęsa: Idea and History by Pawel Zyzak),[104] Wałęsa threatened to leave Poland if historians continue to question his past.[105][106] He said that before revealing such information "a historian must decide whether this serves Poland".[105] After the accusations against him resurfaced with the discovery of the Kiszczak dossier on 16 February 2016, Wałęsa called the files "lies, slander and forgeries",[107] and said he "never took money and never made any spoken or written report on anyone".[108] He said of the Polish public, which was about to believe in the allegations, "you have betrayed me, not me you",[99] and "it was I who safely led Poland to a complete victory over communism".[107] On 20 February 2016, Wałęsa wrote in his blog that a secret police officer had begged him to sign the financial documents in the 1970s because the officer had lost money entrusted to him to purchase a vehicle. Wałęsa appealed to the officer to step forward and clear him of the accusations.[109][110]

Personal life

On 8 November 1969, Wałęsa married Mirosława Danuta Gołoś, who worked at a flower shop near the Lenin Shipyard where Wałęsa worked. Soon after they married, she began using her middle name more often than her first name, per Lech's request.[111] The couple had eight children; Bogdan (born 1970), Sławomir (born 1972), Przemysław[112] (1974–2017), Jarosław (born 1976), Magdalena (born 1979), Anna (born 1980), Maria-Wiktoria (born 1982), and Brygida (born 1985).[10][12] As of 2016, Anna is running her father's office in Gdańsk[62] and Jarosław is a European MP.[113]

In 2008, Wałęsa underwent a coronary artery stent placement and the implantation of a cardiac pacemaker at the Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas.[114] He underwent a heart operation in 2021.[115] In January 2022, Wałęsa tested positive for COVID-19. He said he had received three doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.[115]

Honors

 
Wałęsa receiving the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award, 2011

In 1983, Wałęsa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[116] Since then, he has received more than 30 state decorations and more than 50 awards from 30 countries, including Order of the Bath (UK), Order of Merit (Germany), Legion of Honour (France) and European Human Rights Prize (EU 1989).[12] In 2011, he declined to accept the Lithuanian highest order, citing his displeasure at Lithuania's policy towards the Polish diaspora.[117] In 2008, he established the Lech Wałęsa Award. [pl][45]

In 2004, Gdańsk International Airport was officially renamed Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport and Wałęsa's signature was incorporated into the airport's logo.[118][119] A college hall in Northeastern Illinois University (Chicago),[120] six streets, and five schools in Canada, France, Sweden and Poland also were named after Lech Wałęsa

Wałęsa was named Man of the Year by Time magazine (1981),[121] Financial Times (1980), Saudi Gazette (1989) and 12 other newspapers and magazines.[12] He was awarded with over 45 honorary doctorates by universities around the world,[45] including Harvard University and Sorbonne.[116] He was named an honorary karate black belt by International Traditional Karate Federation.[122] Wałęsa is also an honorary citizen of more than 30 cities, including London, Buffalo and Turin.[45]

In the United States, Wałęsa was the first recipient of the Liberty Medal, in 1989.[123] That year, he also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom[124] and became the first non-head-of-state to address a joint meeting of the United States Congress.[125] In 2000, Wałęsa received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[126] Wałęsa symbolically represented Europe by carrying the Olympic flag at the opening ceremony of the 2002 Winter Olympics.[127] In 2004, he represented ten newly acceded EU countries during the official accession ceremony in Strasbourg.[45] In 1993, the heraldic authority of the Kingdom of Sweden assigned Wałęsa a personal coat of arms on the occasion of his admittance into the Royal Order of the Seraphim.[citation needed]

Cultural references

Wałęsa has been portrayed, as himself or a character based on him, in a number of feature and television films. The two most notable of them are:

  • Walesa: Man of Hope (2013) is a biographical drama by Oscar-winning filmmaker Andrzej Wajda about the lives of Wałęsa (Robert Więckiewicz) and his wife Danuta (Agnieszka Grochowska) from 1970 to 1989. It shows Wałęsa's change from a shipyard worker into a charismatic labor leader. The film was shot in the historical locations of the depicted events, including the former Lenin Shipyard. It won three awards, including Silver Hugo for Robert Więckiewicz at Chicago International Film Festival and a Pasinetti Award for Maria Rosaria Omaggio at Venice Film Festival, and was nominated for five more awards.[128]
  • Man of Iron (1981) is another Andrzej Wajda film about the Solidarity movement. The main character, a young worker Maciej Tomczyk (Jerzy Radziwiłowicz) is involved in the anti-Communist labor movement. Tomczyk is clearly portrayed as a parallel to Wałęsa, who appears as himself in the movie. The film was made during the brief relaxation of censorship in Poland between the formation of Solidarity in August 1980 and its suppression in December 1981. Waida was awarded both the Palme d'Or and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at the Cannes Film Festival for the film. In 1982, it was nominated for Oscar as the Best Foreign Language Film and gained seven other awards and nominations.[129]
 
Premiere of Walesa. Man of Hope in Warsaw, 2013

Both of these films were produced in Poland. In December 1989, Warner Bros. intended to produce a "major" movie about Wałęsa, to be made in 1990 and released in 1991.[130] The company paid Wałęsa a $1 million fee for the rights to produce a biopic.[131] Although the movie was never made, this payment sparked controversy in Poland when five years later it emerged that Wałęsa concealed this income to avoid paying taxes on it.[132] The Gdańsk tax office initiated a tax fraud case against Wałęsa but it was later dismissed because the five-year statute of limitations had already run out.[133]

In 1982, Bono was inspired by Wałęsa to write U2's first hit single, "New Year's Day".[135] Coincidentally, the Polish authorities lifted martial law on 1 January 1983, the same day this single was released. Wałęsa also became a hero of a number of Polish pop songs, including a satirical 1991 hit titled Nie wierzcie elektrykom (Don't Trust the Electricians) from the second studio album by the punk rock band Big Cyc which featured a caricature of Wałęsa on its cover.[136]

Patrick Dailly's chamber opera Solidarity, starring Kristen Brown as Wałęsa, was premiered by the San Francisco Cabaret Opera in Berkeley, California, in September 2009.[137]

Sid Meier's Civilization V video game lists Lech Wałęsa amongst its world leader rankings. Wałęsa is ranked 11th on a scale of 1 to 21, with Augustus Caesar ranked as the best world leader of all time and Dan Quayle as the worst. Wałęsa is immediately outranked by Simon Bolivar and is ranked just above Ivan the Terrible. Lech Wałęsa ranks 9th out of 21 in Sid Meier's Civilization VI, immediately outranked by Marcus Aurelius and ranked just above Hatshepsut.[citation needed]

Publications

  • Wałęsa, Lech (1987). A Way of Hope. New-York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0805006680. LCCN 87021194. OL 2391768M.
  • Wałęsa, Lech (1991). Droga do wolności [Road to Freedom] (in Polish). Warsaw: Editions Spotkania. ISBN 8385195033. LCCN 92155586. OL 1293474M.
  • Wałęsa, Lech (1992). The Struggle and the Triumph: An Autobiography. Translated by Philip, Franklin. New York: Arcade Publishing. ISBN 1559701498. LCCN 91035875. OL 1555547M.
  • Wałęsa, Lech (1995). Wszystko, co robię, robię dla Polski [All That I Do, I Do for Poland] (in Polish). Warsaw: Kancelaria Prezydenta RP. ISBN 8390434709. LCCN 96130042. OL 18320510M.

Notes

  1. ^ Polish pronunciation: [ˈlɛɣ‿vaˈwɛ̃sa]
  2. ^ Surname sometimes transliterated as Walesa in English-language sources and media.
  3. ^ The German airfield Danzig-Langfuhr in Wrzeszcz-Gdańsk was located on the site of the former villages Młyniec and Zaspa (now neighborhoods of Gdańsk) and was serviced by prisoners of KL Stutthof forming the Außenkommando KL Stutthof – Danzig-Langfuhr.[3] The airfield was heavily bombed by the Allies in 1945, but remained in use until 1974 (pl).
  4. ^ Izabela Młyńska, after marriage
  5. ^ Bolek was a main character of the popular children's cartoon series Bolek and Lolek. Wałęsa's father's name also was Bolesław (or Bolek in diminutive).
  6. ^ In a book published in 2011, Wałęsa's wife Danuta said she believed the source of her husband's extra money during the 1970s was lottery winnings.[83]

References

  1. ^ "BBC NEWS - Europe - Profile: Lech Walesa". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v . CNN. Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  3. ^ "Standort Danzig". Lexikon-der-Wehrmacht.de.
  4. ^ Pages 129–131. Walesa, Lech. "The Struggle and the Triumph: An Autobiography". Arcade Publishing (1991). ISBN 1-55970-221-4. "He was not yet thirty-four years old."
  5. ^ . Instytut Lecha Wałęsy. Archived from the original on 7 May 2010. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  6. ^ David C. Cook (22 February 2005), Mothers of Influence: The Inspiring Stories of Women Who Made a Difference in Their Children and Their World. New edition. ISBN 1562923684.
  7. ^ a b c "Stanislaw Walesa, stepfather of Polish unionist, dies at 64". Eugene Register-Guard. United Press International. 19 August 1981. p. 8A. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  8. ^ a b Ennis, Thomas W. (19 August 1981). "Stepfather of Lech Wałęsa Dies in Jersey City". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  9. ^ Page 95. Walesa, Lech. "The Struggle and the Triumph: An Autobiography". Arcade Publishing (1991). ISBN 1-55970-221-4.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p . Lech Wałęsa Institute. Archived from the original on 14 June 2009.
  11. ^ a b c d "Lech Wałęsa," Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 11 January 2010, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/634519/Lech-Walesa
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i . Lech Wałęsa Institute. Archived from the original on 3 February 2008..
  13. ^ Hunter, Richard J.; Leo V. Ryan (1998). From Autarchy to Market: Polish Economics and Politics 1945–1995. Westport, CN: Praeger. p. 51. ISBN 0-275-96219-9.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ash, Timothy Garton (13 April 1998). . TIME. The Most Important People of the Century. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008.
  15. ^ Liu, Yanshun (1 July 2016). Jaruzelski, the Shaker of Polish History (in Chinese) (1 ed.). Beijing, China: Shijiezhishi. pp. 54–57. ISBN 9787501252299.
  16. ^ Springer, Axel. "Unerbittlicher General und Figur der Wende". Welt. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
  17. ^ Perdue, William D (October 1995). Paradox of Change: The Rise and Fall of Solidarity in the New Poland (ebook). Praeger/Greenwood. p. 9. ISBN 0-275-95295-9. Retrieved 10 July 2006.
  18. ^ a b c (in Polish) Wałęsa Lech, Encyklopedia WIEM
  19. ^ a b c Timothy Garton Ash, ," The New York Review of Books, vol. 38, no. 11 (13 June 1991).
  20. ^ "Negotiations and the big debate (1984–88)". BBC News. Retrieved 10 July 2006.
  21. ^ Sebetsyen, Victor (2009). Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City: Pantheon Books. ISBN 978-0-375-42532-5.
  22. ^ "Half-free and far from easy: Poland's election", The Economist, 27 May 1989.
  23. ^ Lewis Pauk, "Non-Competitive Elections and Regime Change: Poland 1989," Parliamentary Affairs, 1990, 43: 90–107.
  24. ^ POLAND. Parliamentary Chamber: Sejm. Elections held in 1989. Inter-Parliamentary Union. Last accessed 28 January 2010.
  25. ^ Grażyna Zwolińska, (in Polish) Historyczne wybory 4 czerwca 1989: Zwycięstwo drużyny Lecha ("Historic Elections of 4 June 1989: Victory of Lech's Team"), Gazeta Lubuska, 6 June 2009.
  26. ^ Jarosław Osowski, (in Polish) "Warszawska drużyna Lecha Wałęsy" ("Lech Wałęsa's Warsaw Team"), Gazeta Wyborcza, 4 June 2009.
  27. ^ East, Roger; Pontin, Jolyon (2016). Revolution and Change in Central and Eastern Europe: Revised Edition. London/ New York. p. 37.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Monika Wohlefeld, 1996, "Security Cooperation in Central Europe: Polish Views. NATO," 1996.
  29. ^ a b From "Walesa, Lech," Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2001.
  30. ^ a b c d Jane Perlez, "Walesa, Once atop a High Pedestal, Seems to Stand on a Slippery Slope", New York Times, 6 July 1994.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Voytek Zubek, "The Eclipse of Walesa's Political Career," Europe-Asia Studies, vol. 49, no. 1 (January 1997), pp. 107–24.
  32. ^ Wojtek Kosc, "Here He Comes Again: The Predicted Re-election of Kwaśniewski 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine," Central Europe Review, vol. 2, no. 35, 16 October 2000.
  33. ^ a b "Lech Wałęsa (1943– )," A Guide to the 20th century: Who's Who, Channel 4.
  34. ^ "Economist article". Economist. 22 September 1990. Retrieved 21 April 2009.
  35. ^ Szporer, Michael (2012). The Great Workers Strike of 1980. Lexington Books. ISBN 9780739174876.
  36. ^ Danielle Lussier, "From Solidarity to Division: An Analysis of Lech Wałęsa's Transition to Constituted Leadership", working paper, UC Berkeley.
  37. ^ Wojtek Kosc, "Here He Comes Again: Poland: Heating Up for the Presidency 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine," Central Europe Review, vol. 2, no. 10, 13 March 2000.
  38. ^ "Europe: Poland: Walesa In Polystyrene," New York Times, 17 December 2003.
  39. ^ Bridge, Adrian (3 April 1996). "Walesa cruises into shipyard". The Independent. London. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  40. ^ Perlez, Jane (29 February 1996). "Out of a Job, Walesa Decides to Take to the Lecture Circuit". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  41. ^ "Lech Wałęsa". Speakers Associates Ltd. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  42. ^ "Lech Wałęsa". APB Speakers International. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  43. ^ "Lech Wałęsa". London Speaker Bureau. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  44. ^ a b "About foundation • Fundacja Instytut Lecha Wałęsy". www.ilw.org.pl. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  45. ^ a b c d e . Warsaw: Lech Wałęsa Institute. 24 March 2014. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  46. ^ "Walesa sets up new party". The Independent. London. 3 December 1997. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  47. ^ a b c Day, Matthew (10 October 2000). "Poles spurn Walesa with 0.8pc of vote". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  48. ^ "Wybory Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 2000: Wyniki Oficjalne" (in Polish). Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  49. ^ "Walesa leaves Polish politics". BBC World Service. 15 October 2000. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  50. ^ a b c d "Lech Wałęsa". Encyclopædia Britannica. 18 February 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  51. ^ a b "Walesa leaves Solidarity movement". BBC World Service. 22 August 2006. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  52. ^ "Walesa declines Lithuanian honour". Radio Poland. 7 September 2011.
  53. ^ "Wałęsa ostro o homoseksualistach: Oni muszą wiedzieć, że są mniejszością". TVN24.pl. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  54. ^ Wałęsa, Lech (26 March 2013). "Wałęsa: Drodzy geje!". WPROST.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  55. ^ "Wałęsa: Drodzy Geje! Nie patrzę nikomu do łóżka". wyborcza.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  56. ^ "Lech Walesa: "If we don't give people solutions, it will awaken the demons of the past"". Equal Times. June 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  57. ^ "'Jest talentem'. Tak Wałęsa powiedział o Biedroniu". Polsat News (in Polish). 31 August 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  58. ^ "Wałęsa za związkami partnerskimi, ale jak nie "będą łazić nago po ulicach"". TVN24.pl. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  59. ^ "Wałęsa już nie wygania homoseksualistów 'za mur'? 'Od teraz siedzimy zawsze w pierwszym rzędzie'". Gazeta.pl (in Polish). 29 September 2015. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  60. ^ "Poland and Germany should unite, says Lech Wałęsa". The Telegraph. 24 September 2013. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  61. ^ Chmurak, Elizabeth; Marrapodi, Eric; Tapper, Jake (1 January 2014). "Nobel Peace Prize winner: Obama failed to reclaim America's role as world leader". CNN. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  62. ^ a b c Melman, Yossi (20 September 2015). "'If Europe opens its gates to Muslims, there will be beheadings here'". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  63. ^ Reston, Maeve; Mehta, Seema (30 July 2012). "Romney wins backing of former Polish President Lech Wałęsa". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  64. ^ "". The Washington Post. 11 August 2017.
  65. ^ "Lech Walesa | Biography, Solidarity, Nobel Prize, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. 4 June 2023.
  66. ^ Garton Ash, Timothy. (2002). The Polish revolution : Solidarity (3rd ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300095686. OCLC 50804967.
  67. ^ a b c d "Institute says Poland's Walesa collaborated with Polish Security Service". Reuters. 31 January 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  68. ^ Karatnycky, Adrian (29 February 2016). "Don't Panic About Poland". The Atlantic. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  69. ^ "Prof. A. Dudek: Ujawnienie współpracy L. Wałęsy z SB nie obciąża jego wizerunku jako przywódcy Solidarności". dzieje.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  70. ^ a b c d e f g h i Erlanger, Steven (21 August 2000). "Polish Watchdog Nips at Walesa's Heels". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  71. ^ Engelberg, Stephen (12 June 1992). "Charge of Spying Denied by Walesa". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  72. ^ "Walesa Cleared of Collaboration Charges". Los Angeles Times. 17 November 2005. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  73. ^ Kulish, Nicholas (25 November 2009). "Poland: Former Leader Sues President". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  74. ^ Borger, Julian (4 April 2011). "Lech Wałęsa: the man who 'never made a mistake' sees errors all around". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  75. ^ a b c d "Justification for the Judgement from 31 August 2010". Krzysztof Wyszkowski. 22 May 2012. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  76. ^ . The Budapest Times. 6 September 2010. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  77. ^ Cenckiewicz, Sławomir; Gontarczyk, Piotr (2008). [The SB and Lech Wałęsa: A Biographical Contribution] (in Polish). Gdańsk–Warszawa–Kraków: Instytut Pamieci Nardowej. ISBN 978-83-60464-74-8. LCCN 2009460072. OL 23626992M. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016.
  78. ^ a b c d Puhl, Jan (23 June 2008). "'Positive Proof' Lech Wałęsa was a Communist Spy: Interview with Historian Slawomir Cenckiewicz". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  79. ^ Paterson, Tony (25 June 2008). "Lech Wałęsa fights claims that he was secret police informant". The Independent. London. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  80. ^ a b c Boyes, Roger (25 June 2008). "Lech Wałęsa was a Communist spy, says new book". The Times. London. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  81. ^ Quetteville, Harry de (14 June 2008). "Lech Wałęsa was Communist spy, claims book". The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  82. ^ a b Easton, Adam (23 June 2008). "Walesa scorns collaboration claim". BBC World Service. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  83. ^ The Wall Street Journal
  84. ^ a b c d e f g Kublik, Agnieszka; Czuchnowski, Wojciech (18 June 2008). "IPN Launching Hunt for Wałęsa". Gazeta Wyborcza. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  85. ^ a b Quetteville, Harry de (19 June 2008). . The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  86. ^ Sobczyk, Martin M. (18 February 2016). "Poland State Archives Says Former President Walesa Was Communist Spy". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  87. ^ "New Book Claims Polish Icon Walesa Was Communist Spy". Deutsche Welle. 24 June 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  88. ^ a b Scally, Derek (24 June 2008). "Walesa vows to sue authors over informer claims". The Irish Times. Dublin. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  89. ^ Staszewska, Joanna; Jones, Gareth; Lawrence, Janet (17 June 2008). "Polish book revives informer claims against Walesa". Reuters. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  90. ^ "Row over Lech Wałęsa's Alleged Collaboration with Communists Escalates," Wikinews, Friday, 20 June 2008.
  91. ^ Szporer, Michael (Spring 2009). "Sławomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk, Security Service a Lech Wałęsa: Przyczynek do biografii [The SB and Lech Wałęsa: A Contribution toward a Biography]". Journal of Cold War Studies. 11 (2). MIT Press: 119–121. doi:10.1162/jcws.2009.11.2.119. ISSN 1520-3972. S2CID 57571916.
  92. ^ a b c d "Lech Wałęsa 'was paid Communist informant'". BBC World Service. 18 February 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  93. ^ a b c d e . Warsaw: Institute of National Remembrance. 18 February 2016. Archived from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  94. ^ Berendt, Joanna (18 February 2016). "Lech Wałęsa Faces New Accusations of Communist Collaboration". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  95. ^ . ABC News. Associated Press. 25 February 2016. Archived from the original on 26 February 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  96. ^ a b c Scislowska, Monika (22 February 2016). . The Washington Post. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  97. ^ a b c d e Sobczyk, Martin M. (22 February 2016). "Poland's State Archives Releases Lech Wałęsa Documents". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  98. ^ a b c "Old documents revive Poland's debate over Walesa's past". Associated Press. 17 February 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  99. ^ a b Berendt, Joanna (22 February 2016). "Lech Wałęsa Files Made Public Despite Forgery Claims". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  100. ^ Easton, Adam (18 February 2016). "Informant claims unlikely to alter Polish view of Walesa". BBC World Service. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  101. ^ "Trzy podpisy Wałęsy". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). No. 134. 8 June 1992. p. 3. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  102. ^ Wałęsa, Lech (1987). A Way of Hope. New-York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0805006680. LCCN 87021194. OL 2391768M.
  103. ^ Szporer, Michael (2012). Solidarity: The Great Workers Strike of 1980. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. p. 148. ISBN 9780739174876. LCCN 2012014490. OL 25299438M.
  104. ^ Zyzak, Paweł (March 2009). Lech Wałęsa. Idea i historia [Lech Wałęsa: Idea and History] (in Polish). Krakow: Arcana. ISBN 978-83-609-40-72-3. LCCN 2009460828. OL 23867915M.
  105. ^ a b "Walesa threatens to leave Poland". BBC World Service. 30 March 2009. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  106. ^ Day, Matthew (30 March 2009). "Lech Wałęsa threatens to leave Poland and return Nobel peace prize over spy claims". The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  107. ^ a b Day, Matt (17 February 2008). "Nobel Peace Prize winner accused of being informant for Poland's secret police". The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  108. ^ Scislowska, Monika (19 February 2016). "Ex-Polish president Walesa denies he was a paid informant". Associated Press. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  109. ^ Skłodowski, Tomasz (20 February 2016). "Lech Wałęsa znów zmienia wersję ws. podpisu w dokumentach SB. "Obiecał, że papiery wrócą do mnie"". Kurier Lubelski (in Polish). Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  110. ^ Stankiewicz, Andrzej (20 February 2016). "Lech Wałęsa, niewolnik "Bolka"". Rzeczpospolita (in Polish). Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  111. ^ Sebetsyen, Victor (2009). Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City: Pantheon Books. ISBN 978-0-375-42532-5.
  112. ^ "Lech Walesa buries son, 43, who had struggled with alcohol". Fox News. Associated Press. 13 January 2017. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  113. ^ "8th parliamentary term | Jarosław WAŁĘSA | MEPs | European Parliament". europarl.europa.eu. 13 September 1976. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  114. ^ Nichols, Bruce (4 March 2008). "Walesa leaves Texas hospital after heart treatment Reuters". Reuters. Retrieved 21 April 2009.
  115. ^ a b Koper, Anna; Charlish, Alan (21 January 2022). Written at Warsaw. "Former Polish president, Solidarity leader Walesa has COVID". Reuters. Toronto: Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  116. ^ a b "Lech Wałęsa – Biographical". Nobel Foundation. Oslo. 5 October 1983. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  117. ^ Maslikowski, Dominika (9 September 2011). "Walesa rejects Lithuanian honor, cites treatment of Polish minority". Charleston Gazette-Mail. Associated Press. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  118. ^ "Profile: Lech Wałęsa". BBC World Service. 25 November 2004. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  119. ^ "Polish MP wants referendum over airport named after Wałęsa". Radio Poland. 23 February 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  120. ^ Simonette, Matt (14 April 2014). "NEIU faculty, students ask for renaming of Walesa building". Windy City Times. Chicago. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  121. ^ "Lech Wałęsa, Man of the Year". Time. 4 January 1982. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  122. ^ "Lech Wałęsa receives honorary ITKF black belt: Media release". International Traditional Karate Federation. 10 October 2009. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  123. ^ "Lech Wałęsa". National Constitution Center. 4 July 1989. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  124. ^ Dowd, Maureen (14 November 1989). "Solidarity's Envoy: Bush Give Walesa Medal of Freedom". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  125. ^ "History: Art & Archives: U.S. House of Representatives: "Fast Facts"". United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  126. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org.
  127. ^ . Warsaw: Lech Wałęsa Institute. 24 March 2014. Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  128. ^ Walesa. Czlowiek z nadziei at IMDb  
  129. ^ Czlowiek z zelaza at IMDb  
  130. ^ "Warners Plans Major Film on Lech Wałęsa". Los Angeles Times. United Press International. 4 December 1989. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  131. ^ "Million Dollar Story". Orlando Sentinel. 12 January 1990. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  132. ^ "Walesa Didn't Pay Polish Taxes on $1 Million From Warner Bros". Associated Press. 16 November 1995. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  133. ^ Easter, Gerald M. (2012). Capital, Coercion, and Postcommunist States. Cornell University Press. p. 157. ISBN 9780801465277.
  134. ^ "Pope John Paul II (TV Mini-Series 2005– )", IMDb, retrieved 14 January 2020
  135. ^ Fields, Gaylord (7 May 2012). "New Year's Day". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  136. ^ Big Cyc (1991). Nie Wierzcie Elektrykom. [CD] Poland: Polskie Nagrania Muza.
  137. ^ Bullock, Ken (24 September 2009). "SF Cabaret Opera Premieres 'Solidarity'". Berkeley Daily Planet. Retrieved 29 February 2016.

External links

  • Official website of Lech Wałęsa Institute
  • Official profile on Facebook
  • Lech Wałęsa Biography and Interview with American Academy of Achievement
  • Polish Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa addresses joint meeting of the U.S. Congress
  • Lech Wałęsa on Nobelprize.org  
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by President of Poland
1990–1995
Succeeded by

lech, wałęsa, wałęsa, redirects, here, other, uses, wałęsa, disambiguation, born, september, 1943, polish, statesman, dissident, nobel, peace, prize, laureate, served, president, poland, between, 1990, 1995, after, winning, 1990, election, wałęsa, became, firs. Walesa redirects here For other uses see Walesa disambiguation Lech Walesa a b born 29 September 1943 is a Polish statesman dissident and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who served as the president of Poland between 1990 and 1995 After winning the 1990 election Walesa became the first democratically elected president of Poland since 1926 and the first ever Polish president elected by popular vote A shipyard electrician by trade Walesa became the leader of the Solidarity movement and led a successful pro democratic effort which in 1989 ended Communist rule in Poland and ushered in the end of the Cold War Lech WalesaWalesa in 2019President of PolandIn office 22 December 1990 22 December 1995Prime MinisterTadeusz MazowieckiJan Krzysztof BieleckiJan OlszewskiWaldemar PawlakHanna SuchockaWaldemar PawlakJozef OleksyPreceded byWojciech Jaruzelski in country Ryszard Kaczorowski in exile Succeeded byAleksander KwasniewskiPersonal detailsBorn 1943 09 29 29 September 1943 age 80 Popowo PolandPolitical partySolidarity 1980 1988 Solidarity Citizens Committee 1988 1993 Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms 1993 1997 Solidarity Electoral Action 1997 2001 Christian Democracy of the Third Polish Republic 1997 2001 SpouseMiroslawa Danuta Golos m 1969 wbr Children8 including JaroslawAwardsFull listSignatureLech Walesa s voice source source Walesa following the signing of the Gdansk AgreementRecorded 31 August 1980While working at the Lenin Shipyard now Gdansk Shipyard Walesa an electrician became a trade union activist for which he was persecuted by the government placed under surveillance fired in 1976 and arrested several times In August 1980 he was instrumental in political negotiations that led to the ground breaking Gdansk Agreement between striking workers and the government He co founded the Solidarity trade union whose membership rose to over ten million After martial law in Poland was imposed and Solidarity was outlawed Walesa was again arrested Released from custody he continued his activism and was prominent in the establishment of the Round Table Agreement that led to the semi free 1989 Polish legislative election and a Solidarity led government He presided over Poland s transition from Marxist Leninist state socialism into a free market capitalist liberal democracy but his active role in Polish politics diminished after he narrowly lost the 1995 Polish presidential election In 1995 he established the Lech Walesa Institute Since 1980 Walesa has received hundreds of prizes honors and awards from multiple countries and organizations worldwide He was named the Time Person of the Year 1981 and one of Time s 100 most important people of the 20th century 1999 He has received over forty honorary degrees including from Harvard University and Columbia University as well as dozens of the highest state orders including the Presidential Medal of Freedom the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath and the French Grand Cross of Legion of Honour In 1989 Walesa was the first foreign non head of state to address the Joint Meeting of the U S Congress The Gdansk Lech Walesa Airport has borne his name since 2004 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Solidarity movement 3 Presidency 4 Post presidency 4 1 Political views 5 Walesa and secret police 5 1 2000 Lustration Court ruling 5 2 SB and Lech Walesa A contribution to biography 2008 5 3 Kiszczak archives 5 4 Walesa s response 6 Personal life 7 Honors 8 Cultural references 9 Publications 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly lifeWalesa was born in Popowo Reichsgau Danzig West Prussia Germany German occupied Poland 2 His father Boleslaw Walesa 1908 1945 was a carpenter who was rounded up and interned in a forced labour camp at Mlyniec outpost of KL Stutthof by the German occupying forces before Lech was born c Boleslaw returned home after the war but died two months later from exhaustion and illness 4 Lech s mother Feliksa Walesa nee Kamienska 1916 1975 5 has been credited with shaping her son s beliefs and tenacity 6 When Lech was nine Feliksa married her brother in law Stanislaw Walesa 1916 1981 a farmer 7 Lech had three elder full siblings Izabela 1934 2012 d Edward born 1937 and Stanislaw born 1939 and three younger half brothers Tadeusz born 1946 Zygmunt born 1948 and Wojciech 1951 1988 8 In 1973 Lech s mother and stepfather emigrated to the US for economic reasons 7 They lived in Jersey City New Jersey where Feliksa died in a car accident in 1975 and Stanislaw died of a heart attack in 1981 7 Both of them were buried in Poland 8 In 1961 Lech graduated from primary and vocational school in nearby Chalin and Lipno as a qualified electrician He worked as a car mechanic from 1961 to 1965 and then embarked on his two year obligatory military service attaining the rank of corporal before beginning work on 12 July 1967 as an electrician at Lenin Shipyard Stocznia Gdanska im Lenina now called Gdansk Shipyard Stocznia Gdanska in Gdansk 9 Solidarity movementMain article Solidarity Polish trade union From early in his career Walesa was interested in workers concerns in 1968 he encouraged shipyard colleagues to boycott official rallies that condemned recent student strikes 10 He was a charismatic leader 11 who helped organize the illegal 1970 protests at the Gdansk Shipyard when workers protested the government s decree raising food prices and he was considered for the position of chairman of the strike committee 2 10 The strikes outcome which involved the deaths of over 30 workers galvanized Walesa s views on the need for change 10 In June 1976 Walesa lost his job at the Gdansk Shipyard because of his continued involvement in illegal unions strikes and a campaign to commemorate the victims of the 1970 protests 2 10 12 Afterwards he worked as an electrician for several other companies but his activism led to him continually being laid off and he was jobless for long periods 10 Walesa and his family were under constant surveillance by the Polish secret police his home and workplace were always bugged 10 Over the next few years he was arrested several times for participating in dissident activities 2 nbsp Walesa during the strike at the Lenin Shipyard August 1980Walesa worked closely with the Workers Defence Committee KOR a group that emerged to lend aid to people arrested after the 1976 labor strikes and to their families 2 In June 1978 he became an activist of the underground Free Trade Unions of the Coast Wolne Zwiazki Zawodowe Wybrzeza 12 On 14 August 1980 another rise in food prices led to a strike at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk of which Walesa was one of the instigators Walesa climbed over the shipyard fence and quickly became one of the strike leaders 2 10 The strike inspired other similar strikes in Gdansk which then spread across Poland Walesa headed the Inter Enterprise Strike Committee coordinating the workers at Gdansk and at 20 other plants in the region 2 On 31 August the government represented by Mieczyslaw Jagielski signed an accord the Gdansk Agreement with the Strike Coordinating Committee 2 The agreement granted the Lenin Shipyard workers the right to strike and permitted them to form an independent trade union 13 The Strike Coordinating Committee legalized itself as the National Coordinating Committee of the Solidarnosc Solidarity Free Trade Union and Walesa was chosen as chairman of the committee 2 12 The Solidarity trade union quickly grew ultimately claiming over 10 million members more than a quarter of Poland s population 14 Walesa s role in the strike in the negotiations and in the newly formed independent trade union gained him fame on the international stage 2 10 nbsp Walesa signs autographs during the strike in August 1980 On 10 March 1981 through the introduction of his former superior in the army Walesa met Wojciech Jaruzelski for the first time in the office building of the Council of Ministers for three hours During the meeting Jaruzelski and Walesa agreed that mutual trust was necessary if the problems of Poland were to be solved Walesa said It s not the case that the name of socialism is bad Only some people spoiled the name of socialism He also complained about and criticized the government Jaruzelski informed Walesa of the coming war games of the Warsaw Pact from 16 to 25 March hoping he could help maintain the social order and avoid anti Soviet remarks Jaruzelski also reminded Walesa that Solidarity had used foreign funds Walesa joked We don t have to take only dollars We can take corn fertilizer anything is okay I told Mr Kania before that I would take everything from the enemy The more the better until the enemy was weakened no more 15 16 Walesa held his position until 13 December 1981 when General Jaruzelski declared martial law in Poland 2 Walesa and many other Solidarity leaders and activists were arrested he was incarcerated for 11 months until 14 November 1982 at Chylice Otwock and Arlamow eastern towns near the Soviet border 10 12 On 8 October 1982 Solidarity was outlawed 17 In 1983 Walesa applied to return to the Gdansk Shipyard as an electrician 10 The same year he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 2 He was unable to accept it himself fearing Poland s government would not let him back into the country 2 10 His wife Danuta accepted the prize on his behalf 2 10 Through the mid 1980s Walesa continued underground Solidarity related activities 18 Every issue of the leading underground weekly publication Tygodnik Mazowsze bore his motto Solidarity will not be divided or destroyed 19 Following a 1986 amnesty for Solidarity activists 20 Walesa co founded the Provisional Council of NSZZ Solidarity Tymczasowa Rada NSZZ Solidarnosc the first overt legal Solidarity entity since the declaration of martial law 18 From 1987 to 1990 he organized and led the semi illegal Provisional Executive Committee of the Solidarity Trade Union In mid 1988 he instigated work stoppage strikes at the Gdansk Shipyard 18 He was frequently hauled in for interrogations by the Polish secret police the Security Service during the 1980s On many of these occasions Danuta who was even more anti Communist than her husband was known to openly taunt Security Service agents when they picked Lech up 21 After months of strikes and political deliberations at the conclusion of the 10th plenary session of the Polish United Workers Party PZPR the Polish Communist party the government agreed to enter into Round Table Negotiations that lasted from February to April 1989 2 Walesa was an informal leader of the non governmental side in the negotiations 12 During the talks he traveled throughout Poland giving speeches in support of the negotiations 2 At the end of the talks the government signed an agreement to re establish the Solidarity Trade Union and to organize semi free elections to the Polish parliament in accordance with the Round Table Agreement only members of the Communist party and its allies could stand for 65 percent of the seats in the lower house the Sejm 2 14 22 23 In December 1988 Walesa co founded the Solidarity Citizens Committee 12 this was ostensibly an advisory body but in practice a political party that won the parliamentary elections in June 1989 Solidarity took all the seats in the Sejm that were subject to free elections and all but one seat in the newly re established Senate 24 Walesa was one of Solidarity s most public figures he was an active campaigner appearing on many campaign posters but did not run for parliament himself 2 Solidarity winners in the Sejm elections were referred to as Walesa s team or Lech s team because they had all appeared on their election posters with Walesa 25 26 While ostensibly only chairman of Solidarity Walesa played a key role in practical politics In August 1989 he persuaded leaders of parties formerly allied with the Communist party to form a non Communist coalition government the first non Communist government in the Soviet Bloc The parliament elected Tadeusz Mazowiecki as the first non Communist Prime Minister of Poland in over forty years 14 Presidency nbsp President Bush meets privately with Walesa November 1989 Following the June 1989 parliamentary elections Walesa was disappointed that some of his former fellow campaigners were satisfied to govern alongside former Communists 14 He decided to run for the newly re established office of president using the slogan I don t want to but I have to Nie chce ale musze 2 14 On 9 December 1990 Walesa won the presidential election defeating Prime Minister Mazowiecki and other candidates to become Poland s first freely elected head of state in 63 years and the first non Communist head of state in 45 years 10 In 1993 he founded his own political party the Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms BBWR the grouping s Polish language acronym echoed that of Jozef Pilsudski s Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government of 1928 35 likewise an ostensibly non political organization 27 During his presidency Walesa saw Poland through privatization and transition to a free market economy the Balcerowicz Plan Poland s 1991 first completely free parliamentary elections and a period of redefinition of the country s foreign relations 2 11 He successfully negotiated the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Poland and won a substantial reduction in foreign debts 10 Walesa supported Poland s entry into NATO and the European Union both of which occurred after his presidency in 1999 and 2004 respectively 10 In the early 1990s he proposed the creation of a sub regional security system called NATO bis The concept was supported by right wing and populist movements in Poland but garnered little support abroad Poland s neighbors some of which e g Lithuania had recently regained independence and tended to see the proposal as Polish neo imperialism 14 28 Walesa has been criticized for a confrontational style and for instigating war at the top whereby former Solidarity allies clashed with one another causing annual changes of government 11 14 19 29 30 This increasingly isolated Walesa on the political scene 31 As he lost political allies he came to be surrounded by people who were viewed by the public as incompetent and disreputable 19 31 Mudslinging during election campaigns tarnished his reputation 2 32 Some thought Walesa an ex electrician with no higher education was too plain spoken and too undignified for the post of president 11 14 33 Others thought him too erratic in his views 14 30 34 or complained he was too authoritarian and that he sought to strengthen his own power at the expense of the Sejm 14 30 31 33 Walesa s national security advisor Jacek Merkel credited the shortcomings of Walesa s presidency to his inability to comprehend the office of the president as an institution He was an effective union leader capable of articulating what the workers felt but as president he had difficulty delegating power or navigating bureaucracy 35 clarification needed Walesa s problems were compounded by the difficult transition to a market economy in the long run it was seen as highly successful but it lost Walesa s government much popular support 30 31 36 Walesa s BBWR performed poorly in the 1993 parliamentary elections at times his popular support dwindled to 10 percent and he narrowly lost the 1995 presidential election winning 33 11 percent of the vote in the first round and 48 28 percent in the run off against Aleksander Kwasniewski who represented the resurgent Polish post Communist Democratic Left Alliance SLD 2 14 31 Walesa s fate was sealed by his poor handling of the media in televised debates he appeared incoherent and rude in response to Kwasniewski s extended hand at the end of the first of the two debates he replied that the post Communist leader could shake his leg 31 After the election Walesa said he was going into political retirement and his role in politics became increasingly marginal 29 37 38 Post presidency nbsp Walesa giving a speech at the Legislative Yuan in Taiwan in 1996After losing the 1995 election Walesa announced he would return to work as an electrician at the Gdansk Shipyard 39 Soon afterwards he changed his mind and chose to travel around the world on a lecture circuit 40 Walesa developed a portfolio of three lectures The Impact of an Expanded NATO on Global Security Democracy The Never Ending Battle and Solidarity The New Millennium and reads them at universities and public events with an appearance fee of around 50 000 70 000 41 42 43 In 1995 he founded the Lech Walesa Institute 44 a think tank with a mission to popularize the achievements of Polish Solidarity educate young generations promote democracy and build civil society in Poland and around the world 44 45 In 1997 he founded a new party Christian Democracy of the Third Polish Republic hoping it would help him to successfully run in future elections 46 Walesa s contention for the 2000 presidential election ended with a crushing defeat when he polled 1 01 percent of the vote 47 48 His humiliation was increased because Aleksander Kwasniewski who was re elected in the first round with 54 percent of the vote is a former Communist apparatchik 47 Walesa polled in seventh place 47 after which he announced his withdrawal from Polish politics 49 In 2006 Walesa quit Solidarity in protest of the union s support of the ruling right wing Law and Justice party and Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski twin brothers who had been prominent in Solidarity and were now serving as the country s president and prime minister respectively 50 The main point of disagreement was the Kaczynskis focus on rooting out those who had been involved in Communist rule and their party s attempt to make public all the files of the former Communist secret police 50 Until then only members of the government and parliament had to declare any connection with the former security services 51 Walesa and his supporters argued the so called transparency legislation advocated by the government might turn into a witch hunt and the more than 500 000 Poles who had possibly collaborated with the Communist secret police could face exposure 51 nbsp Walesa speaks at a tourism trade fair in Berlin 2011 nbsp Walesa speaks on VIII European Economic Forum 2015 Political views In 2011 Walesa rejected Lithuania s Order of Vytautas the Great as a result of constant discrimination on the part of the Lithuanian government towards its Polish minority 52 Walesa was well known for his conservative stance on LGBT rights In 2013 he said on Polish television that he doesn t wish for this minority which he tolerates and understands to impose itself on the majority 53 Referring to Robert Biedron he argued that considering that as they represent less than one percent of the Polish society proportionally speaking homosexual MPs should sit in the last row of the parliament or even behind its walls After sharp international criticism including City authorities of San Francisco s decision to rename Walesa Street as a result of those remarks Walesa apologized for his comments stressing that being a man of old date in his view one s sexual orientation should lie in one s intimate sphere 54 55 He said that his intentions were distorted by the media and homosexuality should be respected 56 Over the following years Walesa s views shifted and he has voiced his support for the introduction of same sex marriage in Poland and has repeatedly met with Biedron whom he called a talent and a future president of Poland 57 58 59 In 2013 Walesa suggested the creation of a political union between Poland and Germany 60 In 2014 in a widely publicized interview Walesa expressed his disappointment in another Nobel laureate US president Barack Obama he told CNN When he was elected there was great hope in the world We were hoping that Obama would reclaim moral leadership for America but that failed in terms of politics and morality America no longer leads the world 61 Walesa also accused Obama of not deserving his Nobel Peace Prize 62 during the 2012 US presidential campaign he endorsed Obama s opponent Mitt Romney 63 In September 2015 Walesa referring to the migrant crisis in Europe said watching the refugees on television I noticed that they are well fed well dressed and maybe even are richer than we are If Europe opens its gates soon millions will come through and while living among us will start exercising their own customs including beheading 62 In August 2017 ten Nobel Peace Prize laureates including Walesa urged Saudi Arabia to stop the executions of 14 young people for participating in the 2011 12 Saudi Arabian protests 64 Walesa and secret policeDespite the 2000 ruling of a special lustration court affirming his innocence for many years there have been allegations that Walesa was an informant of the Security Service of the Polish People s Republic Sluzba Bezpieczenstwa or SB the Communist security services in his twenties 65 In his 2002 book titled The Polish Revolution Solidarity British historian Timothy Garton Ash writes that Walesa while vehemently denying being a regular Security Service informer admitted that he had signed something under interrogation in the 1970s 66 378 In 2008 a book written by historians Slawomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk titled SB a Lech Walesa Przyczynek do biografii SB and Lech Walesa Contribution to biography purported to show that Walesa codenamed Bolek had been an operative for the security services from 1970 to 1976 50 The issue of Walesa s alleged collaboration with the communist regime resurfaced again in February 2016 when the Institute of National Remembrance seized materials from the widow of Czeslaw Kiszczak former minister of the Minister of Interior that were said to document Walesa s role as a spy for the security services 50 In 2017 a handwriting study ordered by the government controlled Institute of National Remembrance INR stated that signatures on several documents from the 1970s belonged to Walesa 67 The exact nature of Walesa s relationship with Security Service continues to be a source of scholarly debate among historians 68 69 2000 Lustration Court ruling On 12 August 2000 Walesa who was running a presidential campaign at the time was cleared by the special Lustration Court of charges that he collaborated with the Communist era secret services and reported on the activities of his fellow shipyard workers due to the lack of evidence 70 Anti Communists Piotr Naimski one of the first members of the Workers Defense Committee that led to the Solidarity trade union and Antoni Macierewicz Walesa s former Interior Minister testified against him in the closed vetting trial Naimski who said he testified with a heavy heart expressed his disappointment that Walesa made a mistake by not going openly to the public and he has missed an important chance 70 According to Naimski the court cleared Walesa on technical grounds because it did not find certain original documents many of which had been destroyed since 1989 that offered sufficient proof that Walesa was lying 70 In 1992 Naimski as a head of the State Protection Office started the process of screening people suspected of being Communist collaborators in Poland 70 In June that year he helped Antoni Macierewicz prepare a list of 64 members of the government and parliament who were named as spies in the police records these included Walesa then the Polish president 70 Walesa s name was included on the list after a wrenching internal debate about the virtues of honesty versus political discretion 70 In response to the publication of this list President Walesa immediately engineered the fall of prime minister Jan Olszewski and the dismissal of Interior Minister Macierewicz 71 A parliamentary committee later concluded Walesa had not signed an agreement with the secret police 70 A 1997 Polish law made vetting a requirement for those seeking high public office According to the law it is not a crime to have collaborated but those who deny it and are found to have lied are banned from political life for ten years The 2000 presidential election was the first use of this law 70 Despite helping Walesa in 2005 to receive the official status of a victim of communist regime from the Institute of National Remembrance IPN 72 this court ruling did not convince many Poles 70 In November 2009 Walesa sued the president of Poland Lech Kaczynski over his repeated collaboration allegations 73 Five months later Kaczynski failed to invite Walesa to the commemoration service at Katyn which almost certainly saved Walesa s life because the presidential plane crashed killing all on board 74 In August 2010 Walesa lost a libel case against Krzysztof Wyszkowski his former fellow activist who also publicly accused Walesa of being a Communist agent in 1970s 75 76 SB and Lech Walesa A contribution to biography 2008 The most comprehensive analysis of Walesa s possible collaboration with secret police was provided in a 2008 book SB a Lech Walesa Przyczynek do biografii pl SB and Lech Walesa Contribution to biography 77 The book was written by two historians from the Institute of National Remembrance Slawomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk and included documents from the archives of the secret police that were inherited by the institute 78 Among the documents were registration cards memos notes from the secret police and reports from the informant 79 80 The book s authors argue that Walesa working under the code name Bolek e was a secret police informant from 1970 after being released from jail until 1976 before he was fired from the shipyard 81 According to the authors he wrote reports and informed on more than 20 people and some of them were persecuted by the Communist police He identified people and eavesdropped on his colleagues at work while they were listening to Radio Free Europe for example 82 The book describes the fate of seven of his alleged victims information regarding others was destroyed or stolen from the files 78 According to them Walesa received over 13 000 zlotys as remuneration for his services from the Security Service while the monthly salary at the time was about 3 500 zlotys f 84 85 The authors said oppositionist activity in Poland in the first half of 1970s was minimal and Walesa s role in it was quite marginal 80 However according to the book despite formally renouncing his ties with Security Service in 1976 Walesa went on to have contacts with Communist officials 86 The authors also claim that during his 1990 1995 presidency Walesa used his office to destroy the evidence of his collaboration with the secret police by removing incriminating documents from the archives 80 According to the book historians discovered that with the help of the state intelligence agency Walesa Interior Minister Andrzej Milczanowski and other members of Walesa s administration had borrowed from the archives the secret police files that had connections to Walesa and returned them with key pages removed 78 84 When it was discovered at the turn of 1995 96 the following prosecutorial inquiry was discontinued for political reasons despite the case attracting much public attention 75 84 Slawomir Cenckiewicz also said that in 1983 when Walesa was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize the secret police tried to embarrass him and leaked information about Walesa s previous collaboration with the government By this time though Walesa was already so popular that most Poles did not believe the official media and dismissed the allegations as a manipulation by the Communist authorities 78 The book s first print run sold out in Poland within hours 87 88 The book received substantial coverage in the media provoked nationwide debate and was noted by the international press 89 90 91 Walesa vowed to sue the authors but never did 88 Kiszczak archives On 18 February 2016 the government affiliated INR in Warsaw announced it had seized a package of original documents that allegedly proved Walesa was a paid Security Service informant 92 67 The documents dated from the period 1970 1976 they were seized from the home of a recently deceased former interior minister General Czeslaw Kiszczak 93 The documents authenticity was confirmed by an archival expert 93 94 but the prosecutors demanded a handwriting examination 95 Eventually the requested examination concluded that the documents were authentic which suggest he was a paid informant 67 Walesa previously said that he had signed a commitment to inform document but that he had never acted on it 67 nbsp Signature Lech Walesa Bolek on the collaboration agreement with Security Service from the Kiszczak archivesThe dossier consists of two folders The first is a personal file containing 90 pages of documents including a handwritten commitment to cooperate with Polish Security Service dated 21 December 1970 96 and signed Lech Walesa Bolek with a pledge he would never admit his collaboration with secret police not even to family 97 the file also contains the confirmations of having received funds 92 93 The second is a work file which contains 279 pages of documents including numerous reports by Bolek on his co workers at Gdansk Shipyard and notes by Security Service officers from meetings with him 92 93 According to one note Walesa agreed to collaborate out of fear of persecution after the workers protest in 1970 96 The documents also show that at first Bolek eagerly provided information on the opinions and actions of his co workers and took money for the information but his enthusiasm diminished and the quality of his information decreased until he was deemed no longer valuable and collaboration with him was terminated in 1976 96 The sealed dossier also contained a letter hand written by Kiszczak in April 1996 in which he informs the Director of the Polish Central Archives of Modern Records Archiwum Akt Nowych about the accompanying files documenting the collaboration of Walesa with the Polish Security Service and asks him not to publish this information until five years after Walesa s death 97 In his letter Kiszczak said he kept the documents out of reach before the 1989 revolution trying to protect Walesa s reputation and afterwards to make sure they did not disappear or were used for political reasons 97 This letter and the accompanying documents had never been sent 93 On 16 February 2016 about three months after Kiszczak s death his widow Maria approached the Institute of National Remembrance and offered to sell the documents to the archives for 90 000 zlotys 23 000 98 However according to Polish law all documents of the political police must be handed in to the state 98 The administration of the institute notified the prosecutor s office which conducted a police search of the Kiszczaks house and seized all the historic documents 98 Maria Kiszczak later said she had not read her husband s letter and had made a mistake 99 Walesa s response For years Walesa vehemently denied collaborating with the Polish Security Service and dismissed the incriminating files as forgeries created by the Security Service to compromise him 100 Walesa also denies that during his presidency he removed documents incriminating him from the archives 84 Until 2008 he denied having ever seen his Security Service file 84 After the publication of the book SB a Lech Walesa in 2008 he said that while he was president I did borrow the file but didn t remove anything from it I saw there were some documents there about me and that they were clearly forgeries I told my secretaries to tape up and seal the file I wrote don t open on it But someone didn t obey removed the papers now casting suspicion on me 84 85 Walesa s interior minister Andrzej Milczanowski denied the cover up and said he had full legal rights to make those documents available to President Walesa and that no original documents were removed from the file which contained only photocopies 84 Walesa has offered conflicting statements regarding the authenticity of the documents 97 Initially he appeared to come close to an admission saying in 1992 in December 1970 I signed three or four documents 75 101 to escape from the secret police 97 In his 1987 autobiography A Way of Hope 102 Walesa said It is also the truth that I had not left that clash completely pure They gave me a condition sign And then I signed 75 He denied he acted upon the collaboration agreement 103 However in his later years Walesa said all the documents are forgeries and told the BBC in 2008 you will not find any signature of mine agreeing to collaborate anywhere 82 92 In 2009 after the publication of another biography connecting him with the secret police Lech Walesa Idea and History by Pawel Zyzak 104 Walesa threatened to leave Poland if historians continue to question his past 105 106 He said that before revealing such information a historian must decide whether this serves Poland 105 After the accusations against him resurfaced with the discovery of the Kiszczak dossier on 16 February 2016 Walesa called the files lies slander and forgeries 107 and said he never took money and never made any spoken or written report on anyone 108 He said of the Polish public which was about to believe in the allegations you have betrayed me not me you 99 and it was I who safely led Poland to a complete victory over communism 107 On 20 February 2016 Walesa wrote in his blog that a secret police officer had begged him to sign the financial documents in the 1970s because the officer had lost money entrusted to him to purchase a vehicle Walesa appealed to the officer to step forward and clear him of the accusations 109 110 Personal lifeOn 8 November 1969 Walesa married Miroslawa Danuta Golos who worked at a flower shop near the Lenin Shipyard where Walesa worked Soon after they married she began using her middle name more often than her first name per Lech s request 111 The couple had eight children Bogdan born 1970 Slawomir born 1972 Przemyslaw 112 1974 2017 Jaroslaw born 1976 Magdalena born 1979 Anna born 1980 Maria Wiktoria born 1982 and Brygida born 1985 10 12 As of 2016 update Anna is running her father s office in Gdansk 62 and Jaroslaw is a European MP 113 In 2008 Walesa underwent a coronary artery stent placement and the implantation of a cardiac pacemaker at the Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston Texas 114 He underwent a heart operation in 2021 115 In January 2022 Walesa tested positive for COVID 19 He said he had received three doses of the COVID 19 vaccine 115 HonorsMain article List of awards and honors received by Lech Walesa nbsp Walesa receiving the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award 2011In 1983 Walesa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 116 Since then he has received more than 30 state decorations and more than 50 awards from 30 countries including Order of the Bath UK Order of Merit Germany Legion of Honour France and European Human Rights Prize EU 1989 12 In 2011 he declined to accept the Lithuanian highest order citing his displeasure at Lithuania s policy towards the Polish diaspora 117 In 2008 he established the Lech Walesa Award pl 45 In 2004 Gdansk International Airport was officially renamed Gdansk Lech Walesa Airport and Walesa s signature was incorporated into the airport s logo 118 119 A college hall in Northeastern Illinois University Chicago 120 six streets and five schools in Canada France Sweden and Poland also were named after Lech WalesaWalesa was named Man of the Year by Time magazine 1981 121 Financial Times 1980 Saudi Gazette 1989 and 12 other newspapers and magazines 12 He was awarded with over 45 honorary doctorates by universities around the world 45 including Harvard University and Sorbonne 116 He was named an honorary karate black belt by International Traditional Karate Federation 122 Walesa is also an honorary citizen of more than 30 cities including London Buffalo and Turin 45 In the United States Walesa was the first recipient of the Liberty Medal in 1989 123 That year he also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom 124 and became the first non head of state to address a joint meeting of the United States Congress 125 In 2000 Walesa received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement 126 Walesa symbolically represented Europe by carrying the Olympic flag at the opening ceremony of the 2002 Winter Olympics 127 In 2004 he represented ten newly acceded EU countries during the official accession ceremony in Strasbourg 45 In 1993 the heraldic authority of the Kingdom of Sweden assigned Walesa a personal coat of arms on the occasion of his admittance into the Royal Order of the Seraphim citation needed Cultural referencesWalesa has been portrayed as himself or a character based on him in a number of feature and television films The two most notable of them are Walesa Man of Hope 2013 is a biographical drama by Oscar winning filmmaker Andrzej Wajda about the lives of Walesa Robert Wieckiewicz and his wife Danuta Agnieszka Grochowska from 1970 to 1989 It shows Walesa s change from a shipyard worker into a charismatic labor leader The film was shot in the historical locations of the depicted events including the former Lenin Shipyard It won three awards including Silver Hugo for Robert Wieckiewicz at Chicago International Film Festival and a Pasinetti Award for Maria Rosaria Omaggio at Venice Film Festival and was nominated for five more awards 128 Man of Iron 1981 is another Andrzej Wajda film about the Solidarity movement The main character a young worker Maciej Tomczyk Jerzy Radziwilowicz is involved in the anti Communist labor movement Tomczyk is clearly portrayed as a parallel to Walesa who appears as himself in the movie The film was made during the brief relaxation of censorship in Poland between the formation of Solidarity in August 1980 and its suppression in December 1981 Waida was awarded both the Palme d Or and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at the Cannes Film Festival for the film In 1982 it was nominated for Oscar as the Best Foreign Language Film and gained seven other awards and nominations 129 nbsp Premiere of Walesa Man of Hope in Warsaw 2013Both of these films were produced in Poland In December 1989 Warner Bros intended to produce a major movie about Walesa to be made in 1990 and released in 1991 130 The company paid Walesa a 1 million fee for the rights to produce a biopic 131 Although the movie was never made this payment sparked controversy in Poland when five years later it emerged that Walesa concealed this income to avoid paying taxes on it 132 The Gdansk tax office initiated a tax fraud case against Walesa but it was later dismissed because the five year statute of limitations had already run out 133 Polish actor Jacek Lenartowicz pl played Walesa in the 2005 television miniseries Pope John Paul II 134 In 1982 Bono was inspired by Walesa to write U2 s first hit single New Year s Day 135 Coincidentally the Polish authorities lifted martial law on 1 January 1983 the same day this single was released Walesa also became a hero of a number of Polish pop songs including a satirical 1991 hit titled Nie wierzcie elektrykom Don t Trust the Electricians from the second studio album by the punk rock band Big Cyc which featured a caricature of Walesa on its cover 136 Patrick Dailly s chamber opera Solidarity starring Kristen Brown as Walesa was premiered by the San Francisco Cabaret Opera in Berkeley California in September 2009 137 Sid Meier s Civilization V video game lists Lech Walesa amongst its world leader rankings Walesa is ranked 11th on a scale of 1 to 21 with Augustus Caesar ranked as the best world leader of all time and Dan Quayle as the worst Walesa is immediately outranked by Simon Bolivar and is ranked just above Ivan the Terrible Lech Walesa ranks 9th out of 21 in Sid Meier s Civilization VI immediately outranked by Marcus Aurelius and ranked just above Hatshepsut citation needed PublicationsWalesa Lech 1987 A Way of Hope New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0805006680 LCCN 87021194 OL 2391768M Walesa Lech 1991 Droga do wolnosci Road to Freedom in Polish Warsaw Editions Spotkania ISBN 8385195033 LCCN 92155586 OL 1293474M Walesa Lech 1992 The Struggle and the Triumph An Autobiography Translated by Philip Franklin New York Arcade Publishing ISBN 1559701498 LCCN 91035875 OL 1555547M Walesa Lech 1995 Wszystko co robie robie dla Polski All That I Do I Do for Poland in Polish Warsaw Kancelaria Prezydenta RP ISBN 8390434709 LCCN 96130042 OL 18320510M Notes Polish pronunciation ˈlɛɣ vaˈwɛ sa Surname sometimes transliterated as Walesa in English language sources and media The German airfield Danzig Langfuhr in Wrzeszcz Gdansk was located on the site of the former villages Mlyniec and Zaspa now neighborhoods of Gdansk and was serviced by prisoners of KL Stutthof forming the Aussenkommando KL Stutthof Danzig Langfuhr 3 The airfield was heavily bombed by the Allies in 1945 but remained in use until 1974 pl Izabela Mlynska after marriage Bolek was a main character of the popular children s cartoon series Bolek and Lolek Walesa s father s name also was Boleslaw or Bolek in diminutive In a book published in 2011 Walesa s wife Danuta said she believed the source of her husband s extra money during the 1970s was lottery winnings 83 References BBC NEWS Europe Profile Lech Walesa news bbc co uk Retrieved 14 January 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Profile Lech Walesa CNN Archived from the original on 15 April 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2007 Standort Danzig Lexikon der Wehrmacht de Pages 129 131 Walesa Lech The Struggle and the Triumph An Autobiography Arcade Publishing 1991 ISBN 1 55970 221 4 He was not yet thirty four years old Rys biograficzny Instytut Lecha Walesy Archived from the original on 7 May 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2010 David C Cook 22 February 2005 Mothers of Influence The Inspiring Stories of Women Who Made a Difference in Their Children and Their World New edition ISBN 1562923684 a b c Stanislaw Walesa stepfather of Polish unionist dies at 64 Eugene Register Guard United Press International 19 August 1981 p 8A Retrieved 3 March 2016 a b Ennis Thomas W 19 August 1981 Stepfather of Lech Walesa Dies in Jersey City The New York Times Retrieved 3 March 2016 Page 95 Walesa Lech The Struggle and the Triumph An Autobiography Arcade Publishing 1991 ISBN 1 55970 221 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p A Biographical Note Lech Walesa Institute Archived from the original on 14 June 2009 a b c d Lech Walesa Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 11 January 2010 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online https www britannica com EBchecked topic 634519 Lech Walesa a b c d e f g h i ON THE FOUNDER Lech Walesa Institute Archived from the original on 3 February 2008 Hunter Richard J Leo V Ryan 1998 From Autarchy to Market Polish Economics and Politics 1945 1995 Westport CN Praeger p 51 ISBN 0 275 96219 9 a b c d e f g h i j k Ash Timothy Garton 13 April 1998 Lech Walesa TIME The Most Important People of the Century Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 Liu Yanshun 1 July 2016 Jaruzelski the Shaker of Polish History in Chinese 1 ed Beijing China Shijiezhishi pp 54 57 ISBN 9787501252299 Springer Axel Unerbittlicher General und Figur der Wende Welt Retrieved 1 November 2018 Perdue William D October 1995 Paradox of Change The Rise and Fall of Solidarity in the New Poland ebook Praeger Greenwood p 9 ISBN 0 275 95295 9 Retrieved 10 July 2006 a b c in Polish Walesa Lech Encyklopedia WIEM a b c Timothy Garton Ash Poland After Solidarity The New York Review of Books vol 38 no 11 13 June 1991 Negotiations and the big debate 1984 88 BBC News Retrieved 10 July 2006 Sebetsyen Victor 2009 Revolution 1989 The Fall of the Soviet Empire New York City Pantheon Books ISBN 978 0 375 42532 5 Half free and far from easy Poland s election The Economist 27 May 1989 Lewis Pauk Non Competitive Elections and Regime Change Poland 1989 Parliamentary Affairs 1990 43 90 107 POLAND Parliamentary Chamber Sejm Elections held in 1989 Inter Parliamentary Union Last accessed 28 January 2010 Grazyna Zwolinska in Polish Historyczne wybory 4 czerwca 1989 Zwyciestwo druzyny Lecha Historic Elections of 4 June 1989 Victory of Lech s Team Gazeta Lubuska 6 June 2009 Jaroslaw Osowski in Polish Warszawska druzyna Lecha Walesy Lech Walesa s Warsaw Team Gazeta Wyborcza 4 June 2009 East Roger Pontin Jolyon 2016 Revolution and Change in Central and Eastern Europe Revised Edition London New York p 37 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Monika Wohlefeld 1996 Security Cooperation in Central Europe Polish Views NATO 1996 a b From Walesa Lech Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2001 a b c d Jane Perlez Walesa Once atop a High Pedestal Seems to Stand on a Slippery Slope New York Times 6 July 1994 a b c d e f Voytek Zubek The Eclipse of Walesa s Political Career Europe Asia Studies vol 49 no 1 January 1997 pp 107 24 Wojtek Kosc Here He Comes Again The Predicted Re election of Kwasniewski Archived 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Central Europe Review vol 2 no 35 16 October 2000 a b Lech Walesa 1943 A Guide to the 20th century Who s Who Channel 4 Economist article Economist 22 September 1990 Retrieved 21 April 2009 Szporer Michael 2012 The Great Workers Strike of 1980 Lexington Books ISBN 9780739174876 Danielle Lussier From Solidarity to Division An Analysis of Lech Walesa s Transition to Constituted Leadership working paper UC Berkeley Wojtek Kosc Here He Comes Again Poland Heating Up for the Presidency Archived 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Central Europe Review vol 2 no 10 13 March 2000 Europe Poland Walesa In Polystyrene New York Times 17 December 2003 Bridge Adrian 3 April 1996 Walesa cruises into shipyard The Independent London Retrieved 1 March 2016 Perlez Jane 29 February 1996 Out of a Job Walesa Decides to Take to the Lecture Circuit The New York Times Retrieved 28 February 2016 Lech Walesa Speakers Associates Ltd Retrieved 28 February 2016 Lech Walesa APB Speakers International Retrieved 28 February 2016 Lech Walesa London Speaker Bureau Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b About foundation Fundacja Instytut Lecha Walesy www ilw org pl Retrieved 26 October 2019 a b c d e Founder Biography Warsaw Lech Walesa Institute 24 March 2014 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Walesa sets up new party The Independent London 3 December 1997 Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b c Day Matthew 10 October 2000 Poles spurn Walesa with 0 8pc of vote The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Wybory Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 2000 Wyniki Oficjalne in Polish Retrieved 28 February 2016 Walesa leaves Polish politics BBC World Service 15 October 2000 Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b c d Lech Walesa Encyclopaedia Britannica 18 February 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 a b Walesa leaves Solidarity movement BBC World Service 22 August 2006 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Walesa declines Lithuanian honour Radio Poland 7 September 2011 Walesa ostro o homoseksualistach Oni musza wiedziec ze sa mniejszoscia TVN24 pl Retrieved 9 October 2019 Walesa Lech 26 March 2013 Walesa Drodzy geje WPROST pl in Polish Retrieved 9 October 2019 Walesa Drodzy Geje Nie patrze nikomu do lozka wyborcza pl in Polish Retrieved 9 October 2019 Lech Walesa If we don t give people solutions it will awaken the demons of the past Equal Times June 2018 Retrieved 9 October 2019 Jest talentem Tak Walesa powiedzial o Biedroniu Polsat News in Polish 31 August 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2019 Walesa za zwiazkami partnerskimi ale jak nie beda lazic nago po ulicach TVN24 pl Retrieved 9 October 2019 Walesa juz nie wygania homoseksualistow za mur Od teraz siedzimy zawsze w pierwszym rzedzie Gazeta pl in Polish 29 September 2015 Retrieved 9 October 2019 Poland and Germany should unite says Lech Walesa The Telegraph 24 September 2013 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Chmurak Elizabeth Marrapodi Eric Tapper Jake 1 January 2014 Nobel Peace Prize winner Obama failed to reclaim America s role as world leader CNN Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b c Melman Yossi 20 September 2015 If Europe opens its gates to Muslims there will be beheadings here The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 28 February 2016 Reston Maeve Mehta Seema 30 July 2012 Romney wins backing of former Polish President Lech Walesa Los Angeles Times Retrieved 28 February 2016 Nobel laureates urge Saudi king to halt 14 executions The Washington Post 11 August 2017 Lech Walesa Biography Solidarity Nobel Prize amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica 4 June 2023 Garton Ash Timothy 2002 The Polish revolution Solidarity 3rd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0300095686 OCLC 50804967 a b c d Institute says Poland s Walesa collaborated with Polish Security Service Reuters 31 January 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2017 Karatnycky Adrian 29 February 2016 Don t Panic About Poland The Atlantic Retrieved 21 September 2019 Prof A Dudek Ujawnienie wspolpracy L Walesy z SB nie obciaza jego wizerunku jako przywodcy Solidarnosci dzieje pl in Polish Retrieved 21 September 2019 a b c d e f g h i Erlanger Steven 21 August 2000 Polish Watchdog Nips at Walesa s Heels The New York Times Retrieved 23 February 2016 Engelberg Stephen 12 June 1992 Charge of Spying Denied by Walesa The New York Times Retrieved 26 February 2016 Walesa Cleared of Collaboration Charges Los Angeles Times 17 November 2005 Retrieved 25 February 2016 Kulish Nicholas 25 November 2009 Poland Former Leader Sues President The New York Times Retrieved 23 February 2016 Borger Julian 4 April 2011 Lech Walesa the man who never made a mistake sees errors all around The Guardian London Retrieved 25 February 2016 a b c d Justification for the Judgement from 31 August 2010 Krzysztof Wyszkowski 22 May 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2016 Lech Walesa loses court case The Budapest Times 6 September 2010 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Cenckiewicz Slawomir Gontarczyk Piotr 2008 SB a Lech Walesa Przyczynek do biografii The SB and Lech Walesa A Biographical Contribution in Polish Gdansk Warszawa Krakow Instytut Pamieci Nardowej ISBN 978 83 60464 74 8 LCCN 2009460072 OL 23626992M Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 a b c d Puhl Jan 23 June 2008 Positive Proof Lech Walesa was a Communist Spy Interview with Historian Slawomir Cenckiewicz Der Spiegel Retrieved 19 February 2016 Paterson Tony 25 June 2008 Lech Walesa fights claims that he was secret police informant The Independent London Retrieved 20 February 2016 a b c Boyes Roger 25 June 2008 Lech Walesa was a Communist spy says new book The Times London Retrieved 20 February 2016 Quetteville Harry de 14 June 2008 Lech Walesa was Communist spy claims book The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2016 a b Easton Adam 23 June 2008 Walesa scorns collaboration claim BBC World Service Retrieved 20 February 2016 The Wall Street Journal a b c d e f g Kublik Agnieszka Czuchnowski Wojciech 18 June 2008 IPN Launching Hunt for Walesa Gazeta Wyborcza Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b Quetteville Harry de 19 June 2008 Lech Walesa denies allegations that he was a communist spy The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Sobczyk Martin M 18 February 2016 Poland State Archives Says Former President Walesa Was Communist Spy The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 22 February 2016 New Book Claims Polish Icon Walesa Was Communist Spy Deutsche Welle 24 June 2008 Retrieved 23 February 2016 a b Scally Derek 24 June 2008 Walesa vows to sue authors over informer claims The Irish Times Dublin Retrieved 23 February 2016 Staszewska Joanna Jones Gareth Lawrence Janet 17 June 2008 Polish book revives informer claims against Walesa Reuters Retrieved 23 February 2016 Row over Lech Walesa s Alleged Collaboration with Communists Escalates Wikinews Friday 20 June 2008 Szporer Michael Spring 2009 Slawomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk Security Service a Lech Walesa Przyczynek do biografii The SB and Lech Walesa A Contribution toward a Biography Journal of Cold War Studies 11 2 MIT Press 119 121 doi 10 1162 jcws 2009 11 2 119 ISSN 1520 3972 S2CID 57571916 a b c d Lech Walesa was paid Communist informant BBC World Service 18 February 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 a b c d e Official statement on the inspection of the first batch of materials secured by the prosecutor of the IPN on 16 February 2016 Warsaw Institute of National Remembrance 18 February 2016 Archived from the original on 24 February 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Berendt Joanna 18 February 2016 Lech Walesa Faces New Accusations of Communist Collaboration The New York Times Retrieved 19 February 2016 Polish Prosecutors to Probe Secret Files on Lech Walesa ABC News Associated Press 25 February 2016 Archived from the original on 26 February 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2016 a b c Scislowska Monika 22 February 2016 Polish state archive releases secret file on Lech Walesa The Washington Post Associated Press Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b c d e Sobczyk Martin M 22 February 2016 Poland s State Archives Releases Lech Walesa Documents The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b c Old documents revive Poland s debate over Walesa s past Associated Press 17 February 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 a b Berendt Joanna 22 February 2016 Lech Walesa Files Made Public Despite Forgery Claims The New York Times Retrieved 23 February 2016 Easton Adam 18 February 2016 Informant claims unlikely to alter Polish view of Walesa BBC World Service Retrieved 22 February 2016 Trzy podpisy Walesy Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish No 134 8 June 1992 p 3 Retrieved 26 February 2016 Walesa Lech 1987 A Way of Hope New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0805006680 LCCN 87021194 OL 2391768M Szporer Michael 2012 Solidarity The Great Workers Strike of 1980 Lanham MD Lexington Books p 148 ISBN 9780739174876 LCCN 2012014490 OL 25299438M Zyzak Pawel March 2009 Lech Walesa Idea i historia Lech Walesa Idea and History in Polish Krakow Arcana ISBN 978 83 609 40 72 3 LCCN 2009460828 OL 23867915M a b Walesa threatens to leave Poland BBC World Service 30 March 2009 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Day Matthew 30 March 2009 Lech Walesa threatens to leave Poland and return Nobel peace prize over spy claims The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2016 a b Day Matt 17 February 2008 Nobel Peace Prize winner accused of being informant for Poland s secret police The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 25 February 2016 Scislowska Monika 19 February 2016 Ex Polish president Walesa denies he was a paid informant Associated Press Retrieved 22 February 2016 Sklodowski Tomasz 20 February 2016 Lech Walesa znow zmienia wersje ws podpisu w dokumentach SB Obiecal ze papiery wroca do mnie Kurier Lubelski in Polish Retrieved 22 February 2016 Stankiewicz Andrzej 20 February 2016 Lech Walesa niewolnik Bolka Rzeczpospolita in Polish Retrieved 23 February 2016 Sebetsyen Victor 2009 Revolution 1989 The Fall of the Soviet Empire New York City Pantheon Books ISBN 978 0 375 42532 5 Lech Walesa buries son 43 who had struggled with alcohol Fox News Associated Press 13 January 2017 Retrieved 28 July 2017 8th parliamentary term Jaroslaw WALeSA MEPs European Parliament europarl europa eu 13 September 1976 Retrieved 14 January 2020 Nichols Bruce 4 March 2008 Walesa leaves Texas hospital after heart treatment Reuters Reuters Retrieved 21 April 2009 a b Koper Anna Charlish Alan 21 January 2022 Written at Warsaw Former Polish president Solidarity leader Walesa has COVID Reuters Toronto Thomson Reuters Retrieved 1 March 2022 a b Lech Walesa Biographical Nobel Foundation Oslo 5 October 1983 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Maslikowski Dominika 9 September 2011 Walesa rejects Lithuanian honor cites treatment of Polish minority Charleston Gazette Mail Associated Press Retrieved 27 February 2016 Profile Lech Walesa BBC World Service 25 November 2004 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Polish MP wants referendum over airport named after Walesa Radio Poland 23 February 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Simonette Matt 14 April 2014 NEIU faculty students ask for renaming of Walesa building Windy City Times Chicago Retrieved 27 February 2016 Lech Walesa Man of the Year Time 4 January 1982 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Lech Walesa receives honorary ITKF black belt Media release International Traditional Karate Federation 10 October 2009 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Lech Walesa National Constitution Center 4 July 1989 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Dowd Maureen 14 November 1989 Solidarity s Envoy Bush Give Walesa Medal of Freedom The New York Times Retrieved 27 February 2016 History Art amp Archives U S House of Representatives Fast Facts United States House of Representatives Retrieved 27 February 2016 Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org Founder Current Activity Warsaw Lech Walesa Institute 24 March 2014 Archived from the original on 26 March 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Walesa Czlowiek z nadziei at IMDb nbsp Czlowiek z zelaza at IMDb nbsp Warners Plans Major Film on Lech Walesa Los Angeles Times United Press International 4 December 1989 Retrieved 1 March 2016 Million Dollar Story Orlando Sentinel 12 January 1990 Retrieved 1 March 2016 Walesa Didn t Pay Polish Taxes on 1 Million From Warner Bros Associated Press 16 November 1995 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Easter Gerald M 2012 Capital Coercion and Postcommunist States Cornell University Press p 157 ISBN 9780801465277 Pope John Paul II TV Mini Series 2005 IMDb retrieved 14 January 2020 Fields Gaylord 7 May 2012 New Year s Day Rolling Stone Retrieved 29 February 2016 Big Cyc 1991 Nie Wierzcie Elektrykom CD Poland Polskie Nagrania Muza Bullock Ken 24 September 2009 SF Cabaret Opera Premieres Solidarity Berkeley Daily Planet Retrieved 29 February 2016 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lech Walesa nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Lech Walesa Official website of Lech Walesa Institute Official profile on Facebook Lech Walesa Biography and Interview with American Academy of Achievement Polish Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa addresses joint meeting of the U S Congress Lech Walesa on Nobelprize org nbsp Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byWojciech Jaruzelski President of Poland1990 1995 Succeeded byAleksander Kwasniewski Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lech Walesa amp oldid 1214379071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.