Solidarity According To Women
Solidarity According To Women

It was women who closed the gates and launched the Solidarity strike when, on a Saturday in August 1980, workers, satisfied with a raise, stopped their protest and wanted to leave the Gdansk shipyard. If it had not been for the initiative of several determined women, perhaps there would not have been any August 1980 in Polish history. Under martial law, with the men in prisons, the women took on their role. They were not interested neither in joining the union’s power structure, nor in particular posts. The most important thing was their work and its results. When communism in Poland came to an end on June 4, 1989, the vast majority of women in Solidarity disappeared from the political stage. They let themselves be forgotten when their colleagues were taking over the most important posts in power in a free Poland. This documentary by Marta Dzido and Piotr Śliwowski reminds us about these forgotten heroines, giving us a new perspective on the last 30 years of Polish history.

Similar Movies

Portugal: Carnations Against Dictatorship
Arabic Secret
Conversations Between Shifts
The Number on Great-Grandpa's Arm
The History of the Civil War
Torn from the Flag
1979: Big Bang of the Present
30 Years of Democracy
The Girls
Leninland
The Deal
Once My Mother
On Rubik's Road
Miners Shot Down
Breaking the Cycle
Kymatica
My Kieslowski
At Home in Utopia
Cuba and the Cameraman