发表于2024-11-19
Poland pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載 2024
No European nation has been fought over more savagely or<br > more frequently than Poland, and no European people has a<br > stronger sense of nationhood than the Poles. As William E. Schau-<br > fele, Jr. a former U.S. Ambassador to Poland, writes in the first<br > article in this section, "Poland has had moments of glory and trag-<br > edy, of empire and obliteration, of freedom and occupation, of in-<br > dependence and partition, but the Polish nation has never lost its<br > identity or its vigor."<br > Certainly, Polish nationalism played a crucial part in the<br >emergence of an independent union that, with 10 million mem-<br >bers, could justifiably claim to have supplanted the Polish Com-<br >munist Party as the voice of the people. Popular risings had<br >occurred in Poland in 1956, 1970, and 1976, but all were quickly<br >suppressed by the government, who avoided prolonged tension by<br >rescinding price increases, thus, ironically, preparing the ground<br >for the economic crisis that brought political discontent to a head<br >in 1980. By the time Lech Walesa, in mid-1980, began the show<br >of quiet, nonviolent resistance in a Gdansk shipyard, all sectors<br >of Polish society excepting the ruling hierarchy were ready to act<br >in concert and did so with a conviction that made Solidarity and<br >Walesa seemingly invincible. Another factor in the rise of Polish<br >nationalism was the election of Karol Wojtyla to the Papacy in<br >1978. Now that the Catholic Church, long the defender of Polish<br >liberties, had a Polish leader, it could not help but seem to many<br >workers that God was on their side. But the discontent had other,<br >nonspiritual causes. Inflation, an insupportable national debt, and<br >a decade of corrupt, inefficient management had created the condi-<br >tions for revolution.<br >
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Poland pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載 2024