This lesson contains 20 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
Transition from dictatorship to democracy: Poland
Transition from a socialist to a democratic system
Slide 1 - Slide
Poland
Slide 2 - Mind map
1956
First protests against the Communist regime
This was after Khrushchev came in power and he criticized Stalin.
Demonstrations protesting against increased food prices and low wages.
Gomulka in power to sorts things out
Slide 3 - Slide
1980
Poland in the economic crisis
Widespread anger and unrest hit Poland in the early 1980s. There were protests over food shortages and the price of consumer products.
Slide 4 - Slide
Slide 5 - Video
What was the trigger for the strikes to start?
A
Anna Walentynowicz is dismissed
B
Food shortages have increased
C
The government has increased the price of food
D
Wages have increased
Slide 6 - Quiz
14 August 1980
Anna Walentynowicz is dismissed from the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk
The trigger for the strike was the firing of a popular worker at the shipyard, a female crane operator and activist called Anna Walentynowicz.
Just 5 months before her planned retirement, she was sacked for being a member of an illegal trade union.
This move proved highly unpopular with the shipyard workforce, who demanded that she be reinstated.
Slide 7 - Slide
15 August 1980
Workers from the shipyard occupy the shipyard.
Leader electrician Lech Walesa demands: increased pay and reinstatement of Anna W.
Foundation of trade Union Solidaity.
Unlike all other trade unions in communist states, Solidarity was not controlled by the communists.
Soon it had 9 million members. Their demands: not only better conditions for workers, but also more political and religious freedom. Unrest spread.
Slide 8 - Slide
Who was the leader of Solidarity
A
Brezhnev
B
Lech Walesa
C
Gomulka
D
Marshal Ustinov
Slide 9 - Quiz
The Interfactory Strike Committee presents the Polish government with 21 ambitious demands: including the right to organize independent trade unions, the right to strike, the release of political prisoners and increased freedom of expression.
Slide 10 - Slide
Slide 11 - Video
03:37
Which demands were accepted by the government?
Slide 12 - Open question
05:53
"Curb Solidarity, or there is worse to come." What is meant here?
Slide 13 - Open question
31 August 1980
Representatives of the communist government of Poland agree to the demands of striking shipyard workers in the city of Gdansk
Slide 14 - Slide
Jaruzelski in power.
Martial law (army has emergency powers) imposed urged by Moscow, it prohibits Solidarity and thousands of its supporters are arrested and held without trial.
Walesa imprisoned= even more a hero. The movement survived underground.
3 December 1981
Slide 15 - Slide
6 February 1989
"Round table" :government and union have talks.
Consequence: Solidarity was once again legalized and elections were organized for June 1980. Freedom of worship restored and status of the church legalized.
Slide 16 - Slide
27 October 1990
First Free and Democratic Elections
Solidarity and other groups were free to put forward candidates, but the communist party was to be guaranteed a fixed number of seats.
Solidarity triumphs in elections and is allowed to form a coalition government that included both communist and Solidarity ministers.
Slide 17 - Slide
Transition from dictatorship to democracy: Poland
Gorbachev ‘s policies of Perestroika (reconstruction and transformation) and Glasnost (openness and transparency), changed the political mood in Poland. By calling for greater freedom in the S.U Gorbachev undermined the old-style communism in Eastern Europe. The threat of Russian tank began to disappear ( Sinatra Doctrine)
Sinatra doctrine: Non-interference was recognized as the guiding principle
of inter-socialist relations ( as opposed to the Brezhnev Doctrine) The name comes from Frank Sinatra’s famous song, My Way (“to each his own way”).
Slide 18 - Slide
Slide 19 - Video
What did you learn? How did Poland transition to democracy?