That was the week ...
GDANSK -- There are some weeks when I'm not sure what to write about, because nothing very interesting seems to have happened.
This was not one of those weeks.
President Obama's speech in Cairo about relations between the US and the Muslim world? Fascinating and significant, certainly worth a newsletter.
Events in Westminster, the apparent public disintegration of the government? Not without interest.
The 20th anniversary of the beginning of the end of Communism in Europe, the reason I'm here in Poland? Definitely worth reflecting upon.
As, of course, is the 20th anniversary of the massacre in Tiananmen Square, when Communist leaders in Beijing refused to do what their Polish counterparts were doing: accept that it was time to look for a new political model.
I'll leave the Obama speech for another day ... but it did seem to me, having read the text of it, that there was plenty there to encourage the hope that Washington is ready to try a new approach.
As for Westminster, events are now moving so fast that between the time I write these words in my Gdansk hotel room and you read them, who knows what'll have happened? (If you heard the programme last night, you'll appreciate how quickly we sometimes have to adapt to new developments.)
So here are just a couple of thoughts about Poland and China. Why did 4 June 1989 mark the end of Communism here in Poland but not in China? Well, for one thing, the Polish democracy movement had been fighting for nearly a decade by the time the end finally came ... remember, the Solidarity independent trade union movement had been established back in 1980, and had survived both the imposition of martial law and the imprisonment of its leaders.
In China, on the other hand, the protests in Tiananmen Square and elsewhere lasted barely seven weeks. True, there had been a fledgling pro-democracy movement, but with nothing like the depth of support that Solidarity had been able to build on in Poland.
And if you believe in the power of individuals to change history, reflect on the roles of two men: Pope John Paul II, the Polish pope, Karol Wojtyla, and the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachov. Here in Poland, the influence of both was enormous. (Even today, in a survey asking Poles who was the most influential man of recent times, the Pope came top.) The Pope came to Poland in 1979 and told Poles they need not be afraid and that they had the power to change their homeland.
Mikhail Gorbachov told them that it was up to them how they chose to be governed, in other words that there would be no Soviet tanks rolling through their streets, as there had been in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968. And in China too, his pro-reform stance encouraged pro-democracy campaigners to believe that, as in the Soviet Union, it was possible for a Communist party to adapt.
In some ways, it already seems a long time ago. Walk through the streets of Warsaw or Gdansk, and it's hard to imagine that just two decades ago, this country was "behind the Iron Curtain" (what a strange sound those words have now!).
But I remember those days so clearly, going on air night after night, reporting the end of Communist rule first here in Poland, then in Hungary, and East Germany, and Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria and Romania. No more Iron Curtain, no more Berlin Wall.
I'll write about Gordon Brown another day.


~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~59~RS~)
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"In some ways, it already seems a long time ago. Walk through the streets of Warsaw or Gdansk, and it's hard to imagine that just two decades ago, this country was "behind the Iron Curtain""
I think Poland was behind the 'Safety Curtain.' Behind Poland were a few more curtains. Actually, it doesn't seem that long ago Robin. Who started the Cold war anyway? The Russians think Churchill and Roosevelt did. I shouldn't complain - my father spent his whole career engaged in the Cold War. How times change.
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Harold Wilson said "a week is a long time in politics." I think that could be changed to " a day is a long time in politics." But poor Gordon has had seven long ones in a row.
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"That Was The Week That Was" or TW3 as it was known. I think it's where David Frost got his start, at least in the US. It was an Americanized version of a British show, a parody on news reporting. We don't need any more such parodies, we have BBC TV instead now :o)
http://www.film.com/tv/that-was-the-week/21331923
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057789/
There are episodes or clips on YouTube.
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Marcus,
"That Was The Week That Was" was a BBC TV programme!
Successful programmes in each country were 'traded' across the Atlantic. We sent "TW3," you sent "My Favorite Martian."
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Gdask/Danzig has, in living historical memory, suffered several tragedies. (Since say 1920 when it was a 'free' city under the 'protection' of the League of Nations - what good that did it! So many areas of the World are given the 'protection' of the international bodies (League of Nations or latterly the United Nations) and it proves to be worthless and a dangerous delusion.
The tragedy is that reporters come and go, just like in Dafur, Rwanda etc. Reporters, like your Robin, tell us that this is a good thing- but are gone before the trouble starts. I must also repeat my criticism of the coverage of Tiananmen - done, I am sure just because you have good TV footage, but in the great flow of events - a slight but interesting blip.
People matter - leaders are two a penny and don't matter - except where they harm the people, be they Tolpuddle Martyrs or the victims of Pol Pot in Cambodia, every person matters. But every so often the people rise up and throw off their oppressors.
Consider this: the World (that is the UK!) is at a tri centennial nadia; it is 315 years since the Bank of England was founded and interest rates have never been so badly managed; it is 314 years since the Speaker of the House of Commons was last evicted; my advice to anyone called Charles is to avoid the Banqueting House for a while lest we start another Glorious Revolution!
The point I make is that you journalists cover the news that you can cover easily (from a cosy hotel) and not necessarily the things that actually matter in the long or medium term or even the short term!!! You claim to, but you don't!
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