Lech Walesa
As
an electrician and trade unionist in the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk,
Poland, Lech Walesa first came to prominence in 1980 when he led an
unofficial strike in protest against a sharp rise in food prices.
Industrial action escalated, and Walesa became head of an
inter-factory strike committee which succeeded in having many of its
demands met.
Renamed Solidarity, the movement was outlawed following the
imposition of martial law by Poland's communist leaders on December
13, 1981, Walesa was imprisoned for a year at Armalewo Castle near the
Soviet border. Conditions eased in 1983 and Walesa travelled abroad to
accept the Nobel Peace Prize. A devout Roman Catholic, he was also
received by the Pope, a fellow Pole.
In 1989 Solidarity was legalized, and was allowed to contest
the forthcoming elections. The result saw the return of the Eastern
Bloc's first non-communist government. Walesa became president of
Poland in 1990 but found himself without an answer to the country's
pressing economic problems.
Defeated in the elections of 1995, he went back to his old job in
the Gdansk shipyards. Despite a strong campaign, he was unable to
prevent the yard's closure a year later.
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