Free Trade Unions of the Coast

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Free Trade Unions of the Coast (

People's Republic of Poland
.

This trade union was founded in Gdańsk on 29 April 1978 by Andrzej Gwiazda, Krzysztof Wyszkowski and Antoni Sokołowski. The choice of the date was not accidental: the founders issued a declaration that "today, on the eve of the May Day, the holiday symbolizing for more than eighty years the struggle for workers' rights, we constitute the Initiating Committee of the Free Trading Unions (Komitet Założycielski Wolnych Związków Zawodowych)".[1] The founders also condemned official, state-subordinated trade unions as a "subordinated instrument for the organized exploitation of all social groups".[2]

Free Trade Unions of the Coast were not a national organization and organized workers only from the coastal 'Tricity' area. They were one of several free trade unions founded in Poland in the late 1970s (others were founded in Katowice, Radom and Szczecin). The Free Trade Unions of the Coast were likely the most significant trade union in Poland before the advent of NSZZ Solidarity (Solidarność).[3]

The idea of forming independent trade unions was first raised by the striking workers during the

bibuła), Robotnik Wybrzeża (Worker of the Coast).[4]

By the summer of 1980 the Free Trade Unions of the Coast drawing support from

ROPCiO and KOR, became the stronghold of the free trade union movement in Poland.[5]
Free Trade Unions organized the
Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk in August 1980, and were instrumental in the creation of Inter-Enterprise Strike Committee (Międzyzakładowy Komitet Strajkowy), whose 21 demands led to the signing of the Gdańsk Agreement and eventually to the creation of the famous NSZZ Solidarity
(Solidarność).

Quotes

From the founding declaration of the Free Trade Unions

References

  1. ^ Jan Kubik, The Power of Symbols Against the Symbols of Power: The Rise of Solidarity and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland, Penn State Press, 1994, Google Print, p.162
  2. ^ Matthew J. Ouimet, The Rise and Fall of the Brezhnev Doctrine in Soviet Foreign Policy, UNC Press, 2003, Google Print, p.108
  3. ^ Michael D. Kennedy, Professionals, Power and Solidarity in Poland: A Critical Sociology of Soviet-Type Society, Cambridge University Press, 1991 Google Print, p.50
  4. ^ Michael Bernhard, Henryk Szlajfer, From The Polish Underground, Penn State Press, 2004, Google Print, p.405
  5. ^ Shana Penn, Solidarity's Secret: The Women Who Defeated Communism in Poland, University of Michigan Press, 2005, [1] Google Print, p.45]

External links