The Citizen (KZN)

State trooper meets Walesa

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– On a Connecticu­t highway, a Polish-speaking state trooper is called to help the occupants of a vehicle with a flat tyre. To his amazement the passenger is former Polish president and Nobel peace laureate Lech Walesa.

Connecticu­t state police on Wednesday were alerted to a disabled SUV on Interstate Highway 84 in Tolland, northeast of the state capital Hartford.

Upon arrival at the scene, they quickly surmised the passenger – sporting his trademark robust moustache – was a bit of a celebrity.

Lukasz Lipert, a 35-year-old native of Poland, was called in for backup when a fellow trooper realised who Walesa was, the Hartford Courant reported.

He helped ensure safety while a mechanic changed the tyre.

Lipert, who came to the United States when he was 18, was “beyond grateful for the opportunit­y to help such an influentia­l individual, and briefly speak to him about the history of Poland”, a police Facebook post said.

The Hartford Courant reported that the conversati­on, in Polish, centred around “their homeland and the anticommun­ist movement in which the 78-year-old Walesa was a key figure”.

“It was definitely a great opportunit­y to meet the man who had a voice during those times,” Lipert told the newspaper.

Walesa, the cofounder of Poland’s Solidarity labour movement who led a landmark 1980 strike by thousands of shipyard workers, became his country’s first post-war democratic­ally elected president in 1990.

Walesa was in Connecticu­t working on relief efforts for Ukraine. –

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