Former Communist leader of Poland: I sinned

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Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, who declared martial law in Poland on Dec. 13, 1981, is now admitting he messed up when he cracked down on pro-democracy activists. But the 85-year-old former Communist Party leader is using spiritual language to describe his shortcomings.

“I see how many mistakes we made, how many sins we committed — that I committed too,” he told the Associated Press.

This is a great story from AP because it examines not only Jaruzelski’s record, but also his religious roots.

“He has been stung for years by accusations that he was a Moscow-backed traitor to his nation and insists he is a Polish patriot.
Raised in a Roman Catholic family of landed gentry, Jaruzelski and his family were deported to Siberia by the Red Army during World War II. There, Jaruzelski was struck by snow blindness and his father died.
He joined the Polish military attached to the Soviet army and fought the Nazis, later embracing communism. He says he was attracted by an ideology that seemed to address the terrible injustice and inequality he’d seen in prewar Poland.”

The entire story is below.
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s last communist leader said Thursday that he had agonized for months before declaring martial law in 1981 to try to crush the Solidarity freedom movement knowing he would make enemies of his countrymen.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski acknowledged his sins and those of his government in defending communism in the face of strikes and protests that eventually resulted in the fall of his regime.
He says many fellow Poles continue to “spit on my name” although he helped the peaceful transition from communist state to free-market democracy starting with semi-free elections nearly 20 years ago on June 4, 1989.
Jaruzelski remains a deeply divisive figure in Poland after imposing martial law. Some view him as a traitor who did Moscow’s dirty work, while others say he was a patriot who spared the country the bloodshed of a Soviet invasion such as in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
Poles awoke on Dec. 13, 1981, to Jaruzelski in his drab olive military uniform and trademark tinted glasses — worn because of snowblindness developed during an earlier exile in Siberia — announcing the crackdown on television.
Tanks rumbled through city streets and thousands of pro-democracy activists, including Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, were rounded up and placed in internment camps. Around 100 people were killed.
“Before imposing martial law, the months, weeks, days, hours for me were a nightmare,” said Jaruzelski, 85, who headed the communist party until 1989, the year before it was disbanded.
“It was an ordeal, thinking about how to resolve the situation. I knew that no matter how it ends — and I believed it would end with the situation stabilizing — that a large part of society will be hostile toward me, is going to spit on my name, and that’s what happened, even today.”
He has faced a slew of trials for his role in crackdowns during communist rule but has never been convicted. Two cases continue: one over the shooting of shipyard workers by soldiers during food price protests in Dec. 1970 and another which started last year over his decision to impose martial law.
Speaking in his wood-paneled office, Jaruzelski said Thursday that he had wanted to reform the communist system from within, even if that meant sharing power with the Solidarity-led democratic opposition.
It was obvious that change was coming when he first met Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985 and they sat together to discuss badly needed reforms.
“In contrast with his predecessors, he was a younger man, broad minded. You could discuss things with him without inhibition … it was a completely different world,” said Jaruzelski. “It was the first time you could actually talk to a Soviet leader.”
Jaruzelski, who headed the Polish government from 1981-85, acknowledged errors were made in pursuing an ideology he believed in — and imprisoned thousands of his countrymen to defend.
“I see how many mistakes we made, how many sins we committed — that I committed too,” he said.
“But we’ve been pushed into a position in which we say it was all bad, that we moved from a country of absolute evil to a country of absolute universal good.
“Not everything was bad then — there were good things, such as social safety net — and not everything now is good, because with the economy and democracy there are things that worry us and even anger us.”
He has been out of active politics for almost 20 years and now describes himself as a social democrat. He said he is proud of Poland’s achievements since 1989, joining NATO in 1999 and the European Union five years later.
And in a wry reference to the hardships of communism with its empty store shelves, he added that he also likes “that the shops are full of goods.”
He has been stung for years by accusations that he was a Moscow-backed traitor to his nation and insists he is a Polish patriot.
Raised in a Roman Catholic family of landed gentry, Jaruzelski and his family were deported to Siberia by the Red Army during World War II. There, Jaruzelski was struck by snow blindness and his father died.
He joined the Polish military attached to the Soviet army and fought the Nazis, later embracing communism. He says he was attracted by an ideology that seemed to address the terrible injustice and inequality he’d seen in prewar Poland.
Jaruzelski served as a general and defense minister in the 1970s and only entered politics as prime minister in 1981 as the regime began its long battle with Solidarity.
He says now that his wife and daughter always ask if he there had been any point in entering politics.
“I can only say I agree. And when you ask me what mistakes I made, there were many, but one of the greatest was allowing myself to be talked into getting involved in politics.”
“But I took that path, and I’m paying for it today. I paid a great price, bore a great weight with my responsibilities.”

2 Responses to “Former Communist leader of Poland: I sinned”

  1. Caleb Powers Says:

    This is quite interesting. We tend to see communists as gray Stepford-politicians, all the same. In fact, there was a great deal of variation between communist countries and communist leaders. It would be interesting if some of these leaders would write autobiographies that told how things really were and how they really progressed.

    I suspect that period in the late ’80s and early ’90s when the old communist regimes fell apart is a period in history that will never be documented very well because few who were there will tell what went on.

  2. José Says:

    What a beautiful and hopeful thought, that redemption is available to anyone regardless of the past. Nice.

    Jaruzelski is an interesting figure in history and I believes he deserves some credit for clearing a path to the end of the Cold War. He could have done more to crack down on the Polish democracy movement, but he allowed a lot more freedom than many other national leaders, and other Eastern Europeans took notice. It was the right action (or inaction) at the right time.

    Caleb, I have a book for you. “The God That Failed” is a series of essays by some folks who were Communist Party members or sympathizers in the pre-WWII era. It’s really interesting to read their stories of disillusionment as they grew to realize that the Communist party leaders were disinterested or even opposed to their noble liberal ideals. Maybe there will be a similar book about Communists during the Cold War. Surely there are a lot of good tales to tell.

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