Edward Gierek

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Birth Date:
06.01.1913
Death date:
29.07.2001
Burial date:
02.08.2001
Length of life:
88
Days since birth:
40647
Years since birth:
111
Days since death:
8301
Years since death:
22
Extra names:
Edward Gierek
Categories:
Communist Party worker, Nominee, WWII participant
Nationality:
 pole
Cemetery:
Sosnowiec, Środula - Zagórze Parish Cemetery (pl)

Edward Gierek (6 January 1913 – 29 July 2001) was a Polish Communist politician. Gierek replaced Władysław Gomułka as First Secretary of the ruling Polish United Workers' Party in the People's Republic of Poland. He was removed from power after the labor strikes leading to Gdańsk Agreement signed with the unionized workers, followed by the imposition of martial law in Poland by a military junta.

Gierek was born in Porąbka, outside of Sosnowiec. He lost his father to a mining accident in a pit at the age of four. His mother married again and emigrated to northern France, where he was raised. He joined the French Communist Party in 1931 and was later deported to Poland for organizing a strike. After his military service in Stryj, Galicia, Gierek went to Belgium in 1934, where he joined the Communist Party of Belgium while working in the coal mines of Waterschei. During World War II, he remained activist of the Communist Party of Belgium. He returned to Poland in 1948 and rose through the party ranks to become by 1957 a member of the Polish parliament. As first secretary of the Katowice voivodship party organization (1957–70), Gierek created a personal power base and became the recognized leader of the young technocrat faction of the party. When rioting over economic conditions broke out in late 1970, Gierek replaced Władysław Gomułka as party first secretary. Gierek promised economic reform and instituted a program to modernize industry and increase the availability of consumer goods, doing so mostly through foreign loans. His good relations with Western politicians, especially France's Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and West Germany's Helmut Schmidt, were a catalyst for his receiving western aid and loans.

The standard of living increased markedly in the Poland of the 1970s, and for a time he was hailed a miracle-worker. The economy, however, began to falter during the 1973 oil crisis, and by 1976 price increases became necessary. New riots broke out in June 1976, and although they were forcibly suppressed, the planned price increases were canceled. In 1979, he reluctantly allowed Pope John Paul II to make his first papal visit to Poland (2–10 June) after Brezhnev first warned him not to allow this visit, then warned him not to "do anything that he (Gierek) would regret". High foreign debts, food shortages, and an outmoded industrial base compelled a new round of economic reforms in 1980. Once again, price increases set off protests across the country, especially in the Gdańsk and Szczecin shipyards. Gierek was forced to grant legal status to Solidarity and to concede the right to strike. (Gdańsk Agreement).

Shortly thereafter, in early September 1980, he was replaced as party leader by Stanisław Kania and removed from power.

Gierek was jailed for a year in December 1981 by the next ruler of Poland, General Wojciech Jaruzelski, who introduced martial law on 13 December 1981 in an effort to make him a scapegoat for the economic troubles Poland was experiencing.

Gierek married Stanisława, née Jędrusik, and they had two sons, one of whom is MEP Adam Gierek. Edward Gierek died of a lung illness in Cieszyn, which is near the southern mountain resort of Ustroń where he spent his last years.

In 1990 two books, each based on extended interviews of Gierek by Janusz Rolicki, were published in Poland and became bestsellers.

Polish society is divided in its assessment of Gierek. His regime is fondly remembered by some for the increase in the standard of living Poland experienced in the 1970s under Gierek's rule. Others emphasize that this increase was made possible by unsustainable foreign loans that were used unwisely, leading directly to the economic crisis the country experienced in the 1980s.

Decorations and awards

This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Polish Wikipedia.

  • Order of the Builders of People's Poland
  • Grand Collar of the Order of Prince Henry (Portugal)
  • Order of Lenin (Soviet Union)

 

Source: wikipedia.org

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        Relations

        Relation nameRelation typeBirth DateDeath dateDescription
        1Stanisława GierekStanisława GierekWife10.02.191814.04.2007
        2
        Tatiana GierekDaughter in-law08.08.194213.01.2017

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