“I think that all nations of the world have the
right to life in dignity. I believe that, sooner or later, the rights of
individuals, of families, and of entire communities will be respected in every
corner of the world. Respect for civic and human rights in Poland and for our
national identity is in the best interest of all Europe. For, in the interest
of Europe is a peaceful Poland, and the Polish aspirations to freedom will never
be stifled. The dialogue in Poland is the only way to achieving internal peace
and that is why it is also an indispensable element of peace in Europe.”—Former
Polish President, union leader, and democracy icon Lech Walesa, “Nobel Peace Prize Address,” Dec. 11,
1983
Lech Walesa was born 75 years ago today in Popowo, Poland. The
arc of his career—first leading the exhilarating battle for freedom in Eastern
Europe, then increasingly marginalized in this region as it embraces the worst
form of nationalism—is familiar but dismaying.
In 1980, Walesa sparked a series of
strikes that won for Solidarity the right to represent workers. The free world
cheered again as he endured house arrest and systematic harassment during Polish
General Jaruzelski's imposition of martial law. Late in the decade, he proceeded from triumph to triumph,
as Solidarity negotiated the right to free elections in Poland. A decade after
the Gdansk strike, he became the first freely elected President of Poland.
Unfortunately, Walesa was less adroit as President
than as dissident and union leader. His alienation of former allies and
inability to ensure a stable post-communist economy ensured a narrow defeat at the polls
in his 1995 re-election bid—ironically enough, to a former communist
functionary.
In the wake of that defeat, many believed that the
freedoms Walesa had helped secure would survive in his homeland. But, while
there has been no going back to Poland’s communist past, the nation has taken
another problematic political turn, with the ruling nationalist Law and Justice
Party supplanting liberal news anchors and talk-show hosts on state media with more
congenial right-wing voices. At the same time, the new leadership also packed the
Constitutional Court with five justices of their own liking and, particularly
heinously, adopted a law (since modified) restricting public debate on the
Holocaust.
Under the new regime, Walesa’s once-bright star has
dimmed. He’s been forced to deny accusations that he served as a communist
informer in the 1970s before he rose up the union ladder. More recently, he was
pointedly excluded from any speaking role at recent anniversary celebrations of
Solidarity.
Poland is “now being destroyed,” Walesa explained to Bloomberg in
discussing why, in his mid-70s, he felt compelled to step back into the political arena to monitor his country’s
elections. His case illustrates how voters the world over, riven by socioeconomic
discontent, might turn away from the liberal free-trade regime that preserved European
collective security after WWII.
No comments:
Post a Comment