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The Pope met Lech Walesa
in private for around 40 minutes |
1983: Pope meets banned union leader
Walesa |
England have
Pope John Paul II has held a private meeting with Lech Walesa, the
founder and leader of Solidarity, Poland's independent trade union
movement.
Solidarity has been banned since December 1981 when martial law was declared following
social tensions in Poland.
It is the second time Pope John Paul II - who was formerly Archbishop
of Krakow - has returned to his native Poland since he became head of the
Roman Catholic Church in 1978.
Mr Walesa met the Pope in the Tatra Mountains in the south of the
country towards the end of his eight-day visit to Poland.
"This right is not given to us by the state...It is a right given by
the Creator."Pope John Paul II said.
Solidarity sources say the
Pope told Mr Walesa that he should rely on the advice of the Catholic
Church, rather than organising street demonstrations as part of the trade
union movement's campaign to bring about political reforms in Poland.
As Archbishop, Karol Wojtyla took an uncompromising stand against the
Communist regime.
But the Pope has urged the country to try to resolve its differences
through dialogue and not confrontation.
Officials close to Mr Walesa say the Pope also told the Solidarity
leader that martial law could be lifted by the autumn.
This, they say, was indicated to the Pope by Prime Minister General
Wojciech Jaruzelski during talks just hours before he met Mr Walesa.
Mr Walesa has said he was "moved and enthusiastic" about his meeting
with the Pope, and is willing to take a "back seat" as a focus for
opposition to the government in ending martial law.
The Pope has also addressed a congregation of two million worshippers
in Katowice, Poland's industrial heartland in the south, and told them
that workers should be able to join free trade unions.
He said: "This right is not given to us by the state. It is a right
given by the Creator."
During his visit the Pope blessed the widows of workers killed when
martial law was imposed.
The Polish Government has said it will cooperate closely with the
Catholic Church in the future, and it is well known the Pope would like
the church to be involved in any reconciliation process.
President Henryk Jablonski, who said goodbye to the Pope at Krakow
airport, told reporters that "dialogue is possible and inevitable".
Before returning to the Vatican in Rome, the Pope made a televised
address to the Polish people from the airport.
He said: "The nation must develop by its own means and
resources."