Democracies, Dictatorships, and Intellectuals
The Fall Lecture Series of 2006
The
Institute invited Adam Michnik, Polish activist,
former parliament member, and founder and editor of Gazeta
Wyborcza, Poland’s leading newspaper, to present
the fourth annual LaBrosse-Levinson Lectures at the University
of Virginia.
Apart from concerns about international terrorism, it
is tempting to be sanguine about the emergence of liberal
democratic states around the world. The last half century
has seen a remarkable spread of democracy to every region
of the world. Yet totalitarian governments and dictatorships
remain. They, and in many countries the shadows still cast
by fallen regimes, merit our close and sustained consideration.
Mr. Michnik spoke from his experience, having seen the
oppression of dictatorship and the possibilities of democracy
as a leading intellectual under both types of regime.
Michnik was co-founder of KOR (Committee for the Defense
of Workers), the organization of dissident intellectuals
in Poland that paved the way for the Solidarity trade union
in the late 1970s. Later, he was a prominent Solidarity
member and participant in the Round Table Talks that eventuated
in the end of communist rule in Poland. In 1989, he was
elected to Poland’s first non-communist parliament.
Professor Irena Grudzinska Gross, from Boston University,
was present to translate all lectures.
A portion of Mr. Michnik’s lectures is published
in the Spring
2007 issue of The Hedgehog Review.
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