Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Bronislaw Wildstein

Interviewed May 3, 2024

I think we all realize that the impact [Pope] John Paul II [first Polish pope who led the Catholic Church 1978-2005] had on the emergence of Solidarity [a labor union formed by Gdansk ship builders that transformed into a nationwide resistance movement] was absolutely fundamental. John Paul II’s first pilgrimage to Poland in June of 1979 – this was a rapid national renaissance for those few days. People went out into the streets, they began to feel free, they saw that they are in this together. Afterwards, – or before then – well, people thought that after that things could no longer go back to the way that they were before. But then the Pope left and things went back to what they were before. So this was a deep feeling of hopelessness, sort of a hangover if you like.

I remember in the beginning of 1980, when in the opposition circles we were racking our brains as to what could be done – since things were becoming harder and harder due to the fact that pressure from the authorities was heavier and heavier, they were locking us up more and more often, and for longer periods – so things were going downhill. And no one could predict what was to happen – the strikes, in their own way, re-evoked the spirit of that particular time of pilgrimage. Of course I think that is what they called up was that renaissance of Polish republicanism, which was reinvigorated by the Pope when he spoke those words, “Let your Spirit descend and renew the face of this land.” [From Pope John Paul II’s homily during his Holy Mass in Warsaw on June 2, 1979]