Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Solidarity
Episode Date: January 27, 2026In 1983, the Nobel Peace Prize honored Polish electrician Lech Walesa for leading the nonviolent revolution of "Solidarity." The Nobel committee recognized this movement as a powerful, globe-reshap...ing challenge to communist authority. Advocating human rights and free unions, Solidarity emerged as the key opposition force in Eastern Europe. This was not only the beginning of the end of communism in Poland, but of the entire Cold War. Learn more about the rise of Solidarity and the beginning of the end of the Eastern Bloc on this episode of Everything, Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1980, a former electrical worker at the Gadanse Shipyard did the unthinkable.
He led a group of workers in a labor strike in a communist country.
Rather than being ruthlessly crushed, the strike won concessions and began a social and political
movement that changed Poland forever.
This wasn't just the beginning of the end of communism in Poland, but of the entire Cold War.
Learn more about the rise of solidarity and the beginning of the end of the Eastern Bloc on this episode
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During the final year of World War II, the Soviet Union claimed to liberate Poland as it advanced
through the country towards Germany. However, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin had no intention of
restoring Poland's pre-war independence. The Soviets believed Poland was essential to their security
interests as a buffer zone separating them from Germany. The Polish people were denied
free elections after World War II to ensure communist rule. There was no communist revolution
like there was in Russia. It was imposed top-down by an outside.
power. At the foundation of the Polish communist state in 1947, the Soviet Union quickly saw
the mismatch between Poland and one-party communism. Stalin said, quote, bringing communism to Poland
was like putting a saddle on a cow. The Soviet leaders were faced with the realization that Poland
was an intensely Roman Catholic country and that the introduction of communism would contradict Polish
values. Furthermore, Polish people had shown very little support for communism,
either before or after World War II.
The main challenge was building loyalty to support the transition from a fiercely nationalistic
and independent nation to a one-party communist state.
And to ensure this loyalty in Eastern Europe, Stalin often resorted to force.
It was in this environment that Lech Wales's solidarity movement emerged during the Cold War.
During the 1970s, attempts at reform were usually met with military force, and dissenters and sympathetic
church leaders were greeted with jail time. Eastern Bloc communist leaders of the late 70s and early
80s had a long history of ignoring public pressure to reform. Economically, Poland was in dire straits,
leading to Eastern Bloc in borrowing from the West during the 1970s, which ultimately fueled an
economic collapse. Loans taken out by Poland funded industrial projects and hoped to modernize the
country's economy. This would have been sustainable so long as the investments had actually worked.
these investments did not yield the returns necessary to cover the mounting interest costs.
Poland's debt to Western creditors quickly escalated, reaching $25 billion by the early 1980s,
up from under $900 million in 1970.
By the early 1980s, surging inflation, widespread job losses, and persistent food shortages
placed tremendous pressure on the regime.
These economic hardships made it increasingly difficult for the government to control prices
and maintain supply, further eroding public trust in the system.
The Polish people sought political liberalization,
but were also driven by the reality of rising food prices and worsening shortages
linked to the failing economy.
For example, inflation was about 10% per year in the early 1980s,
and soared to 200% by the end of the decade.
Years of one-party control had stifled any chance at market competition,
halting Poland's economic progress,
while state subsidies kept inefficient party loyal businesses open.
As shortages grew worse, it became clear that the system was on the verge of collapse.
The first real hope for Poland came in 1978, with the election of the Archbishop of Krakaw,
Carol Waitia, as Pope John Paul II.
His election was a monumental boost to Polish nationalism, and John Paul II became a symbol
of hope against communist oppression in Poland.
The Pope, for his part, viewed the president.
the Polish struggle against communism, not as a political battle, but as a spiritual one.
John Paul electrified crowds and inspired all nations, but it was in his homeland where he had the
biggest impact. While John Paul inspired hope for change from abroad, it was an electrician
from the Gdance shipyard, Lech Walesa, who led the difficult process of reforming the polar system
from within. On August 14, 1980, Wolesa led nearly 16,000 workers in a strike at the Gadance
Lenin Shipyards, which built some of Europe's largest ships.
The strike started simply enough after the dismissal of a crane operator, Anna Valentinovich.
Wellesah, a former shipyard electrician who had been fired years earlier, famously climbed
over the shipyard fence that day and emerged as the leader of the strike committee.
The Gadan strike was technically a violation of the law, and those workers who went on strike
did so at great personal risk. Oddly enough, the government said it was illegal because the
communist government represented the workers. Therefore, there was no need for labor unions.
Driven by rising food prices and diminishing purchasing power, the striking workers issued
a series of demands. The workers demanded the right to form free trade unions, freedom of speech,
economic reforms designed to encourage competition, and the release of political prisoners.
The GADAN strike would last for 18 days. During this time, the workers who had laid down their tools
began to call themselves solidarity, a name that would reflect a growing sense of unity. After 18 days,
the government agreed to terms with the striking workers. The Gadsk agreement, signed by Wolesa,
with a large pen featuring a pitcher of Pope John Paul II, would expand unionization rights and
foreshadow greater political freedoms.
Perhaps the most unlikely victory in the agreement was the legal right to strike in pursuit of collective bargaining.
In a one-party dictatorship like Poland, this represented a transformative moment,
because the Iron Curtain now had a crack in it.
The nation was energized like never before.
If these workers at GADANCE could win these concessions, what other victories could follow?
With the concessions made in Gadams, the Solidarity Movement exploded.
in popularity. By spring of 1981, Solidarity claimed nearly 10 million members, becoming a national
union and moving well beyond shipyard workers. What began as a free trade union movement,
soon evolved into a national conversation about freedom and the limitation or even the
replacement of communism. However, the euphoria soon faded. The Soviets viewed the Polish government
as weak after capitulating to solidarity's demands. Leaders in Moscow,
Moscow saw this as a violation of the Brezhnev doctrine, which held that any threat to one
socialist state in the Eastern Bloc was a threat to all of them.
The Soviets installed a more reliable Soviet-style military leader, Vojekhezelsky.
The Soviet position was clear. Solidary was a threat and had to be eliminated.
When events like this had happened in the past, such as in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in
1968, it resulted in Soviet tanks entering the country. Yerizelski obliged by declaring
martial law, ending the strikes, abolishing solidarity, and arresting its leadership,
including Lech Walesa. The solidarity leaders in prison were committed to freedom, but also
non-violent reform influenced by their strong Catholic faith. Adam Mishnik, one of Wolesa's closest
allies wrote from prison in 1981, reaffirming Solidary's belief that,
violence was not the path forward. He said, quote,
No one in Poland is able to prove today that violence will help us dislodge Soviet troops
from Poland and to remove the communists from power. The USSR has such an enormous military power
that confrontation is simply unthinkable. End quote. Mentionich would note in his letters
from prison that the movement drew inspiration from Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., reaffirming
solidarities enduring commitment to peaceful change despite intense adversity.
The movement would moderate in the 1980s as Yerazlsky initiated modest reforms and the threat
of a Soviet invasion of Poland had passed. Poland's situation throughout the 1980s would also
improve thanks to the support of John Paul II. John Paul did not shy away from issues. He spoke
with great influence about faith and human rights in Poland. He also spoke with great
specificity about the Solidarity Movement, and was a frequent visitor to his native land and often
addressed the group directly. During the imprisonment of Wolesa and Mitchnik, while the nation was
under martial law, the Pope offered these words, quote, in the name of the future of mankind and
humanity, the word solidarity must be pronounced. John Paul made little effort to hide his feelings
about communism. Having grown up in Poland, he saw the struggle as personal and often
used his platform to amplify Welles's and Solidarity's voices. While the Pope inspired the
nation from afar, Wellessa did the heavy lifting in the political arena. Wellesda's Nobel Prize was
awarded in 1983 amid increasingly difficult economic times in Poland. The situation was so precarious that
Wellessa chose not to go to Oslo to receive the award himself. Instead, he sent his wife for
fear that the regime would not allow him to return if he were to leave the country.
After winning the Nobel Prize, he returned to work at the shipyard reinforcing his image
as an every man amongst the Polish workforce.
During times of trouble, Lech Walesa would often encourage prayer.
After the murder of a priest and solidarity member, Father Yerzaa Populusko, by members of the regime's
security force, Wolesa was careful not to incite violence.
The patience and consistency of the movement would be key factors in weathering the storms
during difficult times.
The dynamic began to change in the mid-1980s
when the reformist Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union.
Within the USSR, Gorbachev launched his twin programs of Perestroika and Glasnoss.
Parastroika offered Western-style economic reforms that would open the Soviet Union to Western
investment and ultimately ended up leading to the opening of a McDonald's in Red Square.
Glasnoss contributed to political reforms that would soften one-party
rule in the Soviet sphere by opening the political system to discussion and greater freedoms
of speech in the press. Eastern Europeans held out hope that a softening of Soviet policies
would eventually trickle down to them. Wellesah and Solidarity bided their time and would
re-emerge alongside Gorbachev's reforms in the mid-1980s, which re-energize solidarity.
Gorbachev's program signaled the possibility of major reform within Poland. After several large-scale
national protest movements and strikes in early 1989, the Polish government and solidarity
sat down for what became known as the Roundtable Talks. The settlement included the full legalization
of solidarity, the establishment of a president and two-house legislature, with the Senate
open to free and fair elections. Some seats in the lower house were reserved for communists,
but the rest were open to solidarity. The election took place on June 4, 1989, with a second round
of voting on June 18, 1989.
Solidarity won a landslide victory in the freely contested seats,
including nearly all the seats it could win in the lower house and almost every Senate scene.
It marked the victory of the Solidarity Movement and the beginning of the end of communism in Eastern Europe.
Lequilessa would go on to become Poland's first democratically elected president in December of 1990,
a position that he would hold for five years.
The transition to democracy in Poland took place peacefully without any widespread violence.
The fall of the Berlin Wall may be the most famous and dramatic story from the end of the Cold War,
but the real start of the fall of communism in the Eastern Bloc began with a poll who was elected Pope
and an electrician who formed a labor union.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Research in writing for this episode was provided by Joel Hermanson.
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