History | 24.06.2008

New Book Claims Polish Icon Walesa Was Communist Spy
Lech Walesa
Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Walesa has denied the allegations and is threatening legal action against the authors

A new book released in Poland claims that former Solidarity leader and Nobel laureate Lech Walesa was a communist spy. The allegations have sparked curiosity among Poles, and have some up in arms.

Hundreds lined up outside Warsaw bookstores on Monday, June 23, to snatch up copies of the 700-page book, written by historians Slawomir Cenckiewicz and Piotr Gontarczyk.



The book claims to have new evidence that Walesa was an informer for Poland's communist-era secret service from 1970 to 1976 while working at the Gdansk shipyards. He allegedly used the code name "Bolek."



"Life is complicated sometimes," said co-author Gontarczyk, as reported by German broadcaster ARD. "He was a young deckhand then. And according to our documents he started to work for the secret police in the 1970s.



"No one is questioning that that he's one of the most important figures of the 20th century," he added.



Court had declared Walesa not guilty



Walesa, who served as president of Poland after the fall of communism from 1990 to 1995, has denied the allegations and called the institute's authors "fanatics" with libellous claims. He has threatened legal action and said he will soon release his own book to tell his side of the story.



Although similar rumors have circulated for decades, the book brought the debate to a head and has sparked controversy in Polish politics.



Walesa became a hero worldwide after he led a strike at the shipyards against Poland's communist regime in 1980, helping bring down communism at the end of the decade. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1983.



During his presidency in 2000, Walesa won a court ruling that said he was not a spy. But opponents, including Polish President Lech Kaczynski, say they know he had worked for communists.



Lech Walesa in a crowd at a Solidarity demonstration in Gdansk in 1980Bildunterschrift: Walesa, center, helped found the Solidarity movement in 1980



Critics see political motivation behind book



Many see the allegations as tactics used by right-wing politicians for political gain. In a recent survey conducted by Polish daily Dziennik, 43 percent said they did not believe the former president worked with the secret police.



Former Solidarity activist Wladyslaw Frasyniuk said, according to ARD, "People who spit on history and its authorities are just riffraff. These people haven't done anything to achieve an independent Poland."



The book sparked wide public interest and dominated last week's newspapers and talk shows in Poland.



Jan Baraniecki was one of the few who managed to get a copy of the book on Monday before they sold out. He said he wasn't interested in finding proof of Walesa's innocence or guilt.



"For me it's not important if he was an agent or not. I want to read the book," he said. "There's been too much discussion and only 4,000 books printed. Someone wants to hide something so Poles won't know the whole truth."


DW staff (kjb)

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