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<text id=93CT1826>
<link 93HT0470>
<link 90TT2573>
<link 89TT1596>
<title>
Poland--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
Europe
Poland
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Poland's name, "Polska," derives from the word "Polanie," or
"plains people," one of several Slavic groups that settled the
North European plain between the Oder and the Vistula Rivers and
emerged as distinct groups in the first centuries before Christ.
Roman Catholicism came officially to Poland in A.D. 966, when
King Mieszko I adopted the religion for himself and the
monarchy. The Kingdom of Poland reached its zenith with the
Jagiellonian dynasty in the year following the union with
Lithuania in 1386 and the subsequent defeat of the Teutonic
Knights at Grunwald in 1410. The monarchy survived many
upheavals but eventually went into prolonged decline, ending
with the final partition of Poland by Prussia, Russia, and
Austria in 1795.
</p>
<p> Independence for Poland was one of the 14 points enunciated
by President Woodrow Wilson during World War I. Many
Polish-Americans enlisted to further this aim, and the United
States worked at the postwar conference to ensure its
implementation. However, the Poles were largely responsible for
achieving their own independence. The United States established
diplomatic relations with the newly formed Polish Republic in
April 1919.
</p>
<p> A turbulent period of parliamentary democracy in Poland
lasted from 1919 to 1926, when Marshal Jozef Pilsudski
installed an authoritarian regime, which survived until after
his death in 1935. In 1939, Poland again fell to foreign
invaders; the attack by Nazi Germany marked the onset of World
War II. The country remained under either German or Soviet
occupation until the end of the war but had a
government-in-exile, first in Paris and later in London. The
government-in-exile negotiated with the Soviet authorities
concerning the organization, evacuation, and deployment in the
west of an army of 110,000 Polish prisoners-of-war captured
after the September 17, 1939, Soviet invasion of Poland. The
number of armed Poles reached about 600,000 during World War II--400,000 in an army formed in the Soviet Union under Soviet
command and 200,000 fighting on Western fronts in units loyal
to the London government-in-exile.
</p>
<p> The Soviet Union broke relations with the exiled Polish
Government in April 1943 on the pretext that the Poles had
insulted the U.S.S.R. by requesting that the Red Cross
investigate mass graves of murdered Polish Army officers found
by German military authorities at Katyn. On July 22, 1944, the
Soviet Union installed a communist-controlled "Polish Committee
of National Liberation" at Lublin, in the area of Poland that
advancing Soviet armies had brought under their control. In
January 1945, the U.S.S.R. recognized this committee as the
Polish Government. Meanwhile, Polish underground elements staged
an unsuccessful uprising against the Germans in Warsaw (August
1 - October 2, 1944). After suppressing the uprising, the
Germans evacuated the surviving population of Warsaw and leveled
the city as they retreated in January 1946.
</p>
<p> Following the Yalta Conference of early 1945, a Polish
Provisional Government of National Unity was formed on June 28,
1945, and was recognized by the United States on July 5, 1945.
Stanislaw Mikolajczyk was the principal noncommunist
participant. Although the Yalta agreement called for free
elections, those held on January 19, 1947, were controlled by
the Communist Party. The communists then established a regime
entirely under their domination.
</p>
<p> In October 1956, after the 20th ("de-Stalinization") Soviet
Party Congress at Moscow and the serious "bread and freedom"
riots at Poznan, a shakeup in the communist regime returned
Wladyslaw Gomulka to power as first secretary. Gomulka, a former
head of the Polish Communist Party, had been ousted in 1948 and
later imprisoned for refusing to support certain Stalinist
policies. While retaining most traditional communist economic
and social aims, the Gomulka regime liberalized Polish internal
life until a reverse trend set in during the 1960s.
</p>
<p> In December 1970, workers' discontent erupted into riots on
Poland's Baltic coast. Disturbances and strikes in the port
cities of Gdansk, Gdynia, and Szczecin, triggered by a price
increase for essential consumer goods, reflected deep
dissatisfaction with living and working conditions in the
country. Gomulka was replaced as first secretary by Edward
Gierek.
</p>
<p> Gierek improved economic conditions by increasing real wages,
easing food distribution problems, providing more and better
consumer goods, and modernizing Polish industry, for which much
of the equipment and technology came from the West. Fueled by
large infusions of Western credit, Poland's economic growth rate
was one of the world's highest during the first half of the
1970s. But much of the borrowed capital was misspent, and the
Soviet-style Polish economic mechanism was unable to use
effectively the new resources. The growing debt burden became
insupportable in the late 1970s, as recession in the West and
inflation and market problems at home became more severe.
Economic growth slowed and actually became negative by 1979.
</p>
<p> In October 1978, the Bishop of Krakow, Cardinal Karol
Woytyla, became Pope John Paul II, head of the Roman Catholic
Church. The elevation of a Pole to the papacy electrified
Polish Catholics, and his visit to Poland in June 1979 caused
an outpouring of emotion from enormous throngs, who turned out
to greet "their" pontiff.
</p>
<p> The Gierek government continued to try to stop the spiraling
economic decline. More and more loans were secured from the West
until, by the summer of 1980, the Polish foreign debt stood at
more than $20 billion. The government made another attempt to
increase meat prices in July 1980. This time, a chain reaction
of strikes virtually paralyzed the Baltic coast by the end of
August and, for the first time, closed down most of the coal
mines in Silesia. Poland had entered the most extended crisis
of its postwar history and a period of nearly revolutionary
upheaval.
</p>
<p> On August 31, 1980, striking workers--led by Lech Walesa
and a government negotiating team led by Vice Premier Mieczyslaw
Jagielski--signed a 21-point agreement at the Lenin Shipyard
in Gdansk, which ended the strike there. Similar agreements were
signed at Szczecin and in Silesia. The key provision of all
these agreements was the guarantee of worker's right to form
independent trade unions and the right to strike. Following the
signing of the Gdansk agreement, a new national union movement,
"Solidarity," swept Poland.
</p>
<p> The discontent underlying the strikes was intensified by
revelations of widespread corruption and mismanagement among the
Polish state and party leadership. At the sixth Central
Committee Plenum of the Polish United Workers' (communist) Party
(PZPR) in September 1980, Gierek was ousted and replaced by
Stanislaw Kania as first secretary. Other changes in party and
state cadres continued during the succeeding months as the Kania
program of odnowa (renewal) was proclaimed and initial attempts
were made to overhaul the state and economic machinery in the
midst of continuing worker unrest.
</p>
<p> The rapid deterioration of the PZPR's authority in the months
following the August agreement alarmed the Soviet party
leadership and led to a massive buildup of Soviet forces along
Poland's border during December 1980. In February 1981, Defense
Minister Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski assumed the position of prime
minister as well and called for a 3-month strike moratorium. The
strikes continued sporadically, nonetheless, and in March 1981,
a violent confrontation between the security police and
Solidarity organizers in Bydgoszcz resulted in the first
bloodshed since the beginning of the crisis.
</p>
<p> The first national congress of Solidarity met in Gdansk in
September and October 1981. Lech Walesa was elected national
chairman of the union but only after being chastized by many of
the local leaders for being too moderate. The union continued to
push for far-reaching reforms in the Polish economic and
political systems. Finally, in October, Stanislaw Kania was
replaced by Gen. Jaruzelski as party first secretary. The
collapse of talks between party, union, and church leaders on a
front of national understanding in November was followed by a
call from Solidarity for democratic elections and a referendum
on the party's continued leadership role in the state. On
December 12-13, the regime responded with a declaration of
martial law under which the army and special riot police were
used to crush the union. The police took virtually all of the
Solidarity leadership by surprise and arrested and detained
them, together with many affiliated intellectuals. In October
1982, the Sejm (pronounced "same"--parliament) adopted a new
trade union law abolishing Solidarity and all other unions.
</p>
<p> The United States and its allies responded to these
Soviet-inspired crackdowns in Poland by imposing economic
sanctions against the Polish martial law regime and against the
Soviet Union. Unrest in Poland continued for several years
following martial law.
</p>
<p> In a series of slow, uneven steps, the Polish Government
ended many of the extraordinary repressive measures associated
with martial law and released all remaining internees, although a
large number of political prisoners remained in Polish jails at
that time. The government formally ended martial law in July
1983, having incorporated several martial law statutes into the
civil and penal codes, and enacted a general amnesty, which,
however, still left several hundred political prisoners in jail.
</p>
<p> In July 1984, the government enacted another general amnesty
to commemorate the 40th anniversary of founding of the Polish
People's Republic. However, the kidnapping and murder of a
pro-Solidarity priest, Father Jerzy Popieluszko, by officers of
the Polish security police in October 1984 shocked and angered
the Polish people. The trial of the four security officers
accused of the murder, although marred by the government's
efforts to use it as a vehicle for anticlerical propaganda, was
an unprecedented event in Poland and in the communist world.
The four officers were found guilty and sentenced to lengthy
prison terms.
</p>
<p> Finally, in September 1986, the government released nearly
all political prisoners. Following that amnesty, the Sejm
passed a law providing that some political offenses could be
treated as misdemeanors rather than as criminal offenses.
However, this has since served as a basis for continued
harassment of dissidents and Solidarity activists as it allows
the authorities to mete out severe fines and to confiscate
private property, such as private automobiles. As of mid-1987,
there were several political prisoners still being held on what
the government terms "criminal charges," although there were no
prisoners incarcerated under the political articles of the
criminal code.
</p>
<p> Also in late 1986, the government convened a Consultative
Council to the Council of State, a new body in which independent
voices were supposed to be given a fair hearing. It was
boycotted by Solidarity, although a handful of Catholic social
activists and independent intellectuals have participated.
</p>
<p> Poland's economic recovery has continued slowly, constrained
by substantial difficulties, including a large foreign debt and a
stalled process of economic reform. The government has committed
itself to a so-called "second stage" of reform but, so far,
little has been accomplished.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
September 1987.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>