Lech Walesa
In the 1970s, Lech Walesa was an electrician at the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk, Poland. He was fired for his outspoken criticism of the Communist government, but when his old co-workers went on strike in 1980, Walesa scaled the shipyard fence to join them. The courage exemplified by this act of defiance inspired the workers to hold out until they had won recognition for Solidarity, the first independent trade union in the Eastern Bloc. When Walesa received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1983, the Nobel committee saluted "the power of victory which abides in one person's belief, in his vision and in his courage to follow his call."As the Polish people's demands for freedom grew louder, the government declared martial law and tried to outlaw Solidarity, but the genie was out of the bottle. After another Gdansk strike in 1988, free elections were held, and Solidarity emerged triumphant. In 1990 Lech Walesa, the former shipyard electrician, was elected President of Poland, an office he held for the next five years. Lech Walesa's courage helped bring about the disintegration of the Eastern Bloc and the end of the Cold War. TIME magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people of the past century. Following his presidency, he founded a think-tank, the Lech Walesa Institute, to support the development of local governments in Poland and of democracy throughout the world. He remains a highly visible figure in Polish public life, and lectures around the world on Central European history and politics. In this podcast, recorded at the Academy of Achievement's 2005 Summit in New York City, Lech Walesa, speaking through an interpreter, discusses the long struggle to liberate Poland from Soviet domination, and affirms his conviction that future political systems and international relations should by grounded in timeless ethical principles.