Then-Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa (right) chatted with Bronislaw Geremek (left) and Culture Minister Andrej Celinski in Warsaw at a meeting of the union's leaders in 1988.
(MARCEL MOCHET/AFP/Getty Images)
Bronislaw Geremek, at 76; ex-Polish foreign minister
Then-Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa (right) chatted with Bronislaw Geremek (left) and Culture Minister Andrej Celinski in Warsaw at a meeting of the union's leaders in 1988.
(MARCEL MOCHET/AFP/Getty Images)
WARSAW - Bronislaw Geremek - who was a key figure in the Solidarity trade union that helped topple communism, and went on to become Poland's foreign minister - was killed yesterday in a car accident, police said. He was 76.
Mr. Geremek was driving a Mercedes that collided head-on with a van yesterday afternoon near the western Polish village of Miedzichowo, said Hanna Wachowiak, police spokeswoman for the Wielkopolski region.
The activist-turned-politician had been serving as a member of European Parliament since being elected in 2004. The soft-spoken, urbane Mr. Geremek was highly respected in Poland as a scholar, statesmen, and key adviser in the Soviet bloc's first free trade union, Solidarity.
"Polish sciences and politics have lost a great man," Prime Minister Donald Tusk said in a statement.
José Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, called Mr. Geremek "an exceptional European, a Pole with strong convictions."
"Future generations will remember Bronislaw Geremek as an example of free spirit and he will be recalled as one of the most powerful symbols of liberation against oppression," Barroso said in a statement issued by his Brussels office.
Born in Warsaw, Mr. Geremek earned a doctorate in 1960 from the Polish Academy of Sciences, where he later became a professor and specialized in medieval history. He quit the Polish Communist Party in 1968, after 18 years membership, to protest the Warsaw Pact's invasion of Czechoslovakia to crush the Prague Spring.
In the 1970s, Mr. Geremek became a leading figure in Poland's nascent democratic opposition movement, pushing for more rights and freedoms from the country's Moscow-backed communist regime. He supported the nationwide strikes centered at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk in August 1980 that shook communist Poland to its core and gave birth to Solidarity.
When Poland's communist leaders declared martial law on Dec. 13, 1981, Mr. Geremek was jailed along with other leading Solidarity figures - including Lech Walesa, who went on to serve as Poland's president from 1990 to 1995.
After the fall of communism in Poland in 1989, Mr. Geremek earned a seat in Poland's parliament in the country's first free elections for the Democratic Union party.
Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek appointed him foreign minister in 1997, a post he held until 2000. During nearly three years as Poland's top diplomat, Mr. Geremek successfully ushered Poland into NATO, achieving in 1999 his primary goal of ensuring the country's security in post-communist Europe.
Mr. Geremek, whose wife died in 2004, leaves two sons. Funeral arrangements were not immediately available.![]()


