Poland: We've Caught God by the Arm

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TitlePoland: We've Caught God by the Arm
NotesIn August 1980, workers at the Gdansk shipyard went on strike. Their main demand, free trade unions, was unprecedented in a country where communist party supremacy did not allow the existence of any independent organizations. Lech Walesa, a wily 37 year-old electrician, was the chief negotiator for the workers, who avoided the mistakes of earlier strikes by maintaining strict nonviolent discipline - and by occupying their shipyard, to deter a violent crackdown by authorities. Their persistence paid off as governmnet granted most of their demands. A new union was born, named "Solidarity." A year and a half later, the government imposed martial law and banned the union. It continued its work underground until 1989, when the communist government asked for Lech Walesa's help to settle a new wave of strikes and unrest. Solidarity re-emerged as a revitalized political force, and won decisively in Poland's first free parliamentary elections in 60 years, taking power as the ruling party.

Part of the A Force More Powerful series. This series is also available to loan as a single unit, with all six episodes on two tapes.

Copy Status
Item ID Status Location Call ID
716 in library Resource Centre K 360 Polan  
TypeVideo   PublisherFilms for the Humanties & Sciences
LanguageEnglish   Year2000
AudienceAdult   Call IDK 360 Polan
Length31 minutes    
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