Solidarity+Movement

I'm Henri Gomulka, a worker for the Gdansk Shipyard. I help work on the SS Soldek, fine ship, though as wages go down, the prices go up! I get paid roughly 8 Zloty a day, I can't even get a kilo of sugar at month's end with that kind of money! And to top it off, many men have been talking of some kind of movement named "Solidarity." There have been multiple movements like Solidarity actually, to try and get rid of communism, but, in my condition, I might as well join! Can't have any product if you don't have anyone making it, right? The Solidarity Movement started August 31, 1980, by Lech Walesa at the Gdansk Shipyard. It was the first non-communist controlled trade Union in a Warsaw Pact country. the movement arose due to common essentials, such as food, water, shelter, clothing, rising in price while wages started the same, extremely low. The Solidarity Movement started mainly, under Lech Walesa's wing, due to the Gdansk Agreement being passed, the Agreement was the shipyard giving the workers better pay and working conditions after the workers were on strike. And the government let the movement become a authentic government contract, allowing the movement become a labor union. Lech Walesa and his followers, ranging from common people to high ranking officials in the Catholic Church, had peaceful strikes, going against the Communist government, with the movement's hopes of giving Poland a Republican government. After nine years of oppressing the Communist government, Lech Walesa was able to tear down the Communist Government, and allowed the country Poland to become a Republican country, as he had hoped. He raised the minimum wage of workers, and lowered the prices on common goods, allowing people to live suitable lives now. The fall of the communist government in Poland lead to a succession of the Communist government falling all throughout Europe, which lead to people being able to regular, better lives compared to their previous lives. And, Lech Walesa's peaceful strikes had influence throughout the world, such as Tunisian protesters in 2011, or the UK's miner's strike.