1980 Solidarity
(Link to Audio: Listen to Solidarity 6.6.4)
In 1968, students and workers joined forces in an effort that eventually gave birth to Solidarity as both a movement and a union. Government mismanagement and economic difficulties spanning more than a decade sparked strikes across Poland. A strike at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk in August 1980 set in motion the movement that eventually led to the fall of communism in Poland. The government reached an agreement with the ship workers known as the Gdańsk agreement that allowed workers to form a union. This led to the first independent labor union in a Soviet bloc country, Solidarity, led by a factory worker, Lech Wałęsa.