Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Message to youth: Reject socialism

Former Polish President Lech Walesa knows of what he speaks

- By Mark Thiessen The Washington Post

GDANSK, Poland — In January 1989, as a college student, I came here to march with Solidarity, the movement that helped bring about the peaceful collapse of Soviet communism. Now, more than three decades later, I have brought my children to Gdansk to learn about communism and meet the man who successful­ly fought it: Lech Walesa.

Of the giants who brought down the Iron Curtain — Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Pope John Paul II, Vaclav Havel — only Walesa is still with us. At 79, he still looks as vigorous as the young electricia­n who led a workers’ uprising against the “dictatorsh­ip of the proletaria­t”; forced Poland’s Marxist regime to recognize the first independen­t trade union in the communist world; was imprisoned under martial law only to later force his former jailers at the negotiatin­g table to allow free elections; and who, as the first president of the newly free Poland, anchored his former Warsaw Pact country in the institutio­ns of the West.

Sitting in his office at the European Solidarity Center, the museum built on the grounds of the old Lenin Shipyard where Solidarity was born, I asked about polls showing that half of young Americans have a positive view of socialism. What is his message for young people who have no living memory of communism?

“Many young people are actually fooled to accept communism as an idea,” he said, speaking through an interprete­r. “There are beautiful sentences talking about equality, about justice. … But as soon as you start putting that system into practice, all sorts of serious disasters come about. But young people quite often don’t know it. We have experience (with socialism), so we really know something about it. So I strongly recommend rejecting it.”

But, he continued, “you have to understand why (young people) are looking to the past. They’re going to the past because there are no clear answers, ideas for the future.” As a result, he said, “populist demagogues are leading the world because it’s easier. But those who potentiall­y have better solutions than demagogues and populists have to wake up.”

Walesa greatly admires Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. “Both Zelenskyy and me, we are not politician­s; we are practical people, and that’s why we tend to succeed,” he said. But Walesa worries what will come next for the comedian-turned-statesman. “Up until now, Zelenskyy is doing great,” he said, “but the real problem starts at the moment when you have to turn toward peaceful solutions. Whether he will be able to find that peaceful solution. As a practical man, I see many dangers in that stage of developmen­t. But I wish him all the best.”

The West’s strategy for challengin­g Russian imperialis­m is insufficie­nt, Walesa said. “We have to fight in a political way, with propaganda, like Solidarity — radio stations, television­s, press. We should reach every single Russian on Earth, and we should convince them … ‘Your country should not be giving so much power to a dictator like (Vladimir) Putin. … We are not against you as Russians. You are perishing in the fight, and we are perishing in the fight, and there’s no point in this.’ ”

Asked about his central role in communism’s collapse, he was humble. “Up to the moment of the election of Pope John Paul II, I was organizing people to fight the communists. Over 20 years, I was able to organize just 10 people. And among those 10 … I had two (secret police) agents. But when … John Paul II became the pope, out of the blue I had 10 million people.”

When the pope came to Poland in 1979, Walesa said, even members of the secret police attended the pope’s Masses and gatherings with the Polish people. “We knew many of them, we were looking at them. We learned that they were not real communists; they were radishes — red on the outside and white inside. So, we stopped being afraid of them.”

“Without the pope,” he said, “communism would have lasted much longer.”

He turned to my children, ages 17, 20 and 21: “That’s why I really care that your generation succeeds, because only your success will somehow guarantee my success, the success of Solidarity. … If you succeed, people will praise me. If you don’t succeed, they might curse me!” Walesa gave my children and their generation the gift of a world growing in freedom, prosperity and peace. Now it is in their hands to seize or squander that inheritanc­e.

Marc Thiessen writes a column for The Post on foreign and domestic policy. He is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the former chief speechwrit­er for President George W. Bush.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Former Polish President Lech Walesa is the last of the giants remaining alive who brought down communism.
The Associated Press file Former Polish President Lech Walesa is the last of the giants remaining alive who brought down communism.

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