SOLIDARNOŚĆ: Poland’s Struggle for Freedom at Wayne State
Lech Walesa to Visit Wayne State University In Detroit
By Raymond Rolak
DETROIT– The Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs at Wayne State University will be opening a new exhibit, SOLIDARNOŚĆ: Poland’s Struggle for Freedom.” The former President of Poland, Lech Wałęsa will be making an appearance to bring attention to the 30 year anniversary of the Solidarity labor movement.
The exhibit will open October 27, 2010 and run until July 1, 2011. The Reuther Library at 5401 Cass Ave. is across from the Main Detroit Public Library. “We are just the ambassador’s as so many people helped including the Office of the President, at Wayne State,” said Michael Smith.
Smith, Director of the Reuther Library at WSU and Marcin Chumiecki, Director of the ‘Polish Mission’ at St. Mary’s Schools in Orchard Lake got together last February and went to Miami to invite Lech Wałęsa to help kick off the exhibit.
October is also Polish Heritage Month in America. Smith added, “Wayne State invites the whole community to view the displays during the run. It is concise, informative and historical. The exhibit will be open to the public starting at 9:00 A.M. on Wednesday October 27.”
“The Reuther Library has a strong tradition of reaching out into the community to document our labor history,” Smith added. “We will have some very rare photos and artifacts from Soldiarnosc in the exhibit.”
The Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs at WSU is the largest labor archive in North America. Its mission is to collect, preserve and provide access to the heritage of the American labor movement. Reuther was the long time leader of the United Auto Workers and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1995 by President Bill Clinton. In Metro Detroit the I-696 Freeway is named the Walter P. Reuther Freeway in his honor.
Reuther and his wife May were killed in a 1979 plane crash near Pellston, Michigan.
Smith and Chumiecki also travelled to Poland to research and document the background for the exhibit. There are first person accounts, which are the most valuable in a history account. Some items are on loan from the Polish Mission. Smith added, “Wałęsa said he was honored to come to Detroit to announce the opening of this exhibit. He was genuinely enthused and of course added insights that only he could do. This is living history.”
Wałęsa was President of Poland from 1990-95. He was front and center for the “Solidarity” trade union movement that eventually changed Poland and led to the break of control from Russia. This was the catalyst for the political changing of the borders of the USSR.
A former welder at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk, Poland, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1983 for his human rights efforts throughout Europe.
Wanda Strozyk, President of Fiat Solidarity Union in Poland will also be appearing in Detroit. Her visit just happens to coincide with a historic labor vote that will affect the aviation industry. Thru November 3, the Delta Airlines Flight Attendants and the former Northwest Airlines F/A’s are voting to determine if there is going to be representation by the Association of Flight Attendants-Communication Workers of America (AFL-CIO). Delta is now the largest commercial airline in the world.
Wałęsa, who will be on a restricted schedule during his Detroit visit, was the first democratically elected president in postwar Poland. During his area stay, he will meet privately with labor and community leaders. On October 28, he will travel to Chicago for a fundraiser.
Groups can make arrangements to view the Reuther Labor Library Detroit exhibit at 313-577-4024, starting October 27.