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Honor the Man–and the Movement

Hardly had the Nobel Peace Prize committee announced that Solidarity leader Lech Walesa was its 1983 laureate but President Reagan and other cold warriors began praising the choice as another

Daniel Singer

January 2, 1998

Hardly had the Nobel Peace Prize committee announced that Solidarity leader Lech Walesa was its 1983 laureate but President Reagan and other cold warriors began praising the choice as another victory for the free world. We asked Daniel Singer to give us a view from the European left. –The Editors   The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Lech Walesa was belated. If it had been bestowed a year earlier, it would have been seen as a clear condemnation of the military coup in Poland and a tribute to the workers’ resistance. Honoring Walesa was obviously a political act. The Swedish jurors are not in the habit of hailing labor heroes in the struggle against capitalism. When French labor leader Léon Jouhaux won the Peace Prize in 1951, it was for splitting the French labor movement.

But better late than never, and, intentionally or not, the Stockholm jury has paid a tribute to the Polish working class, whose struggle during the last thirteen years has opened up possibilities of change throughout the Soviet bloc Walesa is neither the man of marble not the man of iron; he is the man of the movement. A man of action rather than a theoretician, a leader who hears voices but keeps his eye on the main chance, he is intimately connected with the struggle of the workers. He is also more than just a symbol of Polish resistance.

In a way, he exemplifies a Polish labor movement in transition. Though he just turned 40 last month, Walesa was considered the "old man" by his fellow strikers. Many of his younger colleagues are about to cross the frontier that separates laborers from technicians, while he has only crossed the one between countryman and townsman, and he retains the peasant’s sly wit. He has participated in all phases of the workers’ battle in Poland. In the winter of 1970, when the shipyard workers won in blood the right to question publicly the government’s economic policies, Walesa was a member of the strike committee in Gdansk. Six years later he took part in the new wave of protests. I n 1978 he was one of the handful of workers who, inspired by KOR, the Workers Defense Committee, formed the provisional body that laid the groundwork for Solidarity.

His great moment came on August 14, 1980. When he climbed over the fence of the Lenin Shipyard, he entered the pages of history. After those seventeen days, that are still shaking the Soviet world, he signed the Gdansk agreement, in which the Polish Communist Party agreed to allow workers to form an Independent union. During the occupation of the shipyard, he demonstrated an extraordinary capacity for gauging the mood of the strikers, for knowing how far they would go. His reply whenever a proposal was brought to him was, "If I go to the gates [where the strikers gathered] they will applaud me or they will sweep me aside."

In the following sixteen months, he was the undoubted, though certainly not the undisputed, leader of Solidarity. It can be argued that during this period the movement, like its leader, showed more talent for riding out the storm than for mobilizing for long-term projects. But we should remember that by mid-1981 Solidarity had sketched the outline of a national program of democratic socialism based on worker councils and worker-managed factories On December 13 of that year, General Jaruzelskl’s tanks put an end to plans for social experiments.

Solidarity was crushed, and most of its leaders were arrested. All Jaruzelski needed to turn a successful coup into a temporary political victory was Walesa’s blessing, his surrender. Walesa’s silence during his imprisonment was deafening, and his stature among the Polish people grew. When he was released last November amid hints of a deal between the Catholic Church and the state, Walesa revealed another side. He is a devout, practicing Catholic, loyal to the church, but he is first of all a labor leader Unlike the church. he is not immortal. He knew that too great a compromise would destroy his power, so he refused to be the puppet leader of a phony labor union.

After Pope John Paul II’s visit to Poland this summer, many political analysts consigned Walesa to the ashcan of history. More recently, the Polish government tried to dismiss him as an insignificant private citizen while simultaneously mobilizing its propaganda machine to blacken him with accusations that he had a million dollars hidden somewhere outside the country. The reply to all this official mendacity was the standing ovation the crowds at Gdansk stadium gave him when he went there to watch a soccer game in late September.

Walesa is as strong and as weak as the movement he stands for. Solidarity, driven underground, can no longer paralyze the economy, but the regime can no longer mobilize the workers. Walesa is no longer in a position to dictate terms, but by refusing to deal with the spokesman of Poland’s only genuine union, the government has deprived itself of its only chance to carry out reforms. The free labor movement 1s only temporarily defeated, and it is still resilient. That is why Poland is not "normalized" like Czechoslovakia, and that is why hope continues to flicker in the Soviet bloc.

Following the announcement of his Nobel prize, Walesa was lionized by the cold warriors, and it is the left’s job to prevent them from making him their own. We should remind the public that ten years ago a Nobel Jury did not award the Peace Prize to Salvador Allende. Let us tell the jurors that they have made a good start; in years to come they should honor other labor leaders in other parts of the world. The hypocritical admirers of Solidarity should be urged to follow its advice and institute worker control of factories, with management personnel who are elected by the employees, not appointed from above. The word should be spread among the people of Latin America that KOR leader Adam Michnik, who is awaiting trial, sent greetings from his Polish jail cell to the Chilean freedom fighters. We should cut through all the complications and say, simply, that our struggle is a shared one, that Walesa is a fighter against the establishment, that the saga of Solidarity and the continuing battle of the Polish labor movement are reminders in these gloomy times that history has not come to a full stop–in Poland or elsewhere.

Daniel SingerDaniel Singer, for many years The Nation's Paris-based Europe correspondent, was born on September 26, 1926, in Warsaw, was educated in France, Switzerland and England and died on December 2, 2000, in Paris. He was a contributor to The Economist, The New Statesman and the Tribune and appeared as a commentator on NPR, "Monitor Radio" and the BBC, as well as Canadian and Australian broadcasting. (These credits are for his English-language work; he was also fluent in French, Polish, Russian and Italian.) He was the author of Prelude to Revolution: France in May 1968 (Hill & Wang, 1970), The Road to Gdansk (Monthly Review Press, 1981), Is Socialism Doomed?: The Meaning of Mitterrand (Oxford, 1988) and Whose Millennium? Theirs or Ours? (Monthly Review Press, 1999). A specialist on the Western European left as well as the former Communist nations, Singer ranged across the Continent in his dispatches to The Nation. Singer sharply critiqued Western-imposed economic "shock therapy" in the former Eastern Bloc and US support for Boris Yeltsin, sounded early warnings about the re-emergence of Fascist politics into the Italian mainstream, and, across the Mediterranean, reported on an Algeria sliding into civil war. The Daniel Singer Millennium Prize Foundation was founded in 2000 to honor original essays that help further socialist ideas in the tradition of Daniel Singer.  


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