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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Bogdan Borusewicz

Interviewed May 21, 2024

The direct cause for me to organize the strike by myself and the decision to go through with it was to defend the workers whom they [the Communist regime] had started to throw out of their jobs. I decided that one needs to do this because otherwise the two years of hard work I spent on organizing the workers would be wasted. So the originating cause of the strike was political – to prevent their repression. But when the strike spread, what was needed was an appropriate mix of demands. And this was our list of demands, containing the most important political demands, but there were also economic demands.

The rebellion of the workers – which was a local one in 1976 – after the price hikes – this was an economic rebellion. But it was also a catalyst for the creation of political opposition in Poland. This formalized and organized the opposition. So we called into being the Workers’ Defense Committee (KOR), and this was the beginning of Poland’s organized political opposition. What we cited was the Human Rights Conventions, which communist Poland had signed, but which were not implemented, as well as the final act of the Helsinki Conference, the so called Third Basket, which provided for expansion of civil liberties in countries, including in the Communist countries [The “Helsinki Conference” resulted in the Helsinki Accords, an international treaty signed by 35 countries in 1975.

They guaranteed basic human rights and promoted cooperation between the Soviet bloc and western nations. Dissidents and activists in the communist countries used their governments’ signatures to the treaty to advocate for freedom and human rights.] Some things we did; we held self-education meetings, we printed the independent periodical Robotnik Wybrzeża [The Coastal Worker], provided distribution of a periodical called Robotnik [The Worker], which was an independent underground periodical out of Warsaw all that was done under the banner of the Free Labor Union.

In other places people also tried to do such initiatives – but they got smashed, and restricted or crushed. In the Tri-City [Gdansk metropolitan area] area this did not succeed – they were not able to restrict us or crush us.