December 1970 in Gdansk, Gdynia, Szczecin and Elblag was a time of labor strikes. A sudden increase in prices was the direct cause. The coastal areas were brutally pacified by the government. Ten y...
December 1970 in Gdansk, Gdynia, Szczecin and Elblag was a time of labor strikes. A sudden increase in prices was the direct cause. The coastal areas were brutally pacified by the government. Ten years later, to commemorate the victims, a monument was erected – three crosses with anchors attached. Every cross weighs 36 tons and is 138 ft tall. Official delegations visiting Gdansk usually place flowers at the foot of this monument. In the aptly named Solidarity Square, three solemn 42-metre-high crosses tower overhead with anchors attached to them. This striking Monument to the Fallen Shipyard Workers of 1970 stands right next to the European Solidarity Centre, an interactive museum recounting the Polish people’s aspirations to freedom. There is a fascinating story about the long, hard fight against the communist regime, about the many sacrifices made by nations imprisoned behind the Iron Curtain and above all, about hope. Ultimately, it’s a story about their greatest victory; one that forever changed the history of Poland and, in fact, the whole world.