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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Bogdan Borusewicz

Interviewed May 21, 2024

We were afraid of such situations as happened in Hungary in ‘56, or in Czechoslovakia in ’68 [anti-communist uprisings put down by Soviet military power]. We were afraid of the situation, which happened in December of 1970 [worker strikes in Poland that were crushed by the regime]. December of ‘70 was for us, for all, it was something both quite proximate – and it all went down where we were at that time. So first of all – we were afraid that the authorities would use force, the tanks would roll out, and then – we would die.

There were such fears, yes. The people were very afraid then. So that’s why I suggested that we hold a Mass in the plants holding the strike – the Gdansk Shipyard, in the Gdynia Shipyard. Just to buoy the people up, the strikers up. On that first Sunday there were very few of us in the shipyard – very few, barely 300 people. Most had left – they went home, the strike was over for them.

This created a very serious danger for us that the other side would resort to force. At the same time, we were hoping by having the Mass to draw people in from the city, who would now have an excuse to approach the gate – to strengthen and support us. We were very few at the time. Yes, the fear originating from what had happened 10 years earlier was very great. But the desire for freedom was even greater.