Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Andrzej Gwiazda and Joanna Duda-Gwiazda

Interviewed May 20, 2024

JOANNA DUDA-GWIAZDA: In 1976, you might say, following the example of Gdansk [in 1970], there the workers in Radom [Poland] burned down the [Communist Party] Committee building. In addition they also stopped a train, I think in the town of Ursus – it was some kind of a train. And they became subject to awful repression. To wit, they were beaten up, thrown out of work, arrested. So that was when the Workers Defense Committee [KOR] was formed, which was a group of intelligentsia, really, if truth be told, which provided them with legal aid, financial aid; people from Warsaw and not just from Warsaw went out to Radom to attend the trials, and, they simply took up collections. And so then we decided to support this committee.

So we simply wrote a letter to the parliament. We only wrote it, the two of us [Andrzej Gwiazda and Joanna Duda-Gwiazda], since we thought no one else would take such a step, and saying, we thought that what the KOR was doing was justified, and knowing the events of 1970 in the coastal cities, we were certain that it was KOR and not the authorities who were on the right side of this issue [of workers’ rights]. And this letter I think did make a certain impression on Security forces because of course it wound up with the Security Bureau and not the parliament but anyway, sufficient that we immediately got our “shadows,” had bugs [electronic listening device], a prohibition from – we liked to go abroad, into the mountains – so we got a prohibition from crossing the national border, they took these – took away these [visa-like] entries into our national ID booklets, they said we would not receive passports, although it was winter and we were not on our way anywhere for now, so, willy-nilly we entered, you can say, the world of the opposition.