- Romuald Spasowski
F. Romuald Spasowski (
1921-08-20 –1995-08-11 ), once an ardentCommunist and Poland'sambassador to theUnited States , is best known for having defected at the height of theSolidarity crisis in 1981.Early life
Francis Romuald Spasowski was born in
Warsaw ,Poland . His father, Władysław, was a university professor and leading intellectual. Althougn not a member of the Polish Communist party,Władysław Spasowski wrote "The Liberation of Man," an important Communist theoretical work, and raised Romauld to believe inMarxism long before it was fashionable in Polish intellectual circles. Romauld studied and then taught at the College of Mechanics untilGermany invaded Poland in 1939.The Spasowski family was active in the Polish resistance during
World War II . Spasowski and his father were arrested several times by theGestapo . His father committed suicide in 1941 after being tortured by the Nazis. Spasowski hid in his mother's home inMilanówek for a time, where the family harbored several Jewish families. But in 1942 he fled to the Soviet Union.Spasowski served as an officer in the Polish Army division formed in the Soviet Union under Gen.
Zygmunt Berling . Intensely loyal to Poland and convinced that Communism held great promise for his homeland, he joined thePolish United Worker's Party , the official Communist party in Poland, and entered government service almost immediately after the war. In time, Spasowski served on theCentral Auditing Commission , which maintained and audited the party's finances.Spasowski was appointed a member of the
Polish War Crimes Mission at theNuremberg trials .Fluent in both English and Spanish, Spasowski served as Poland's ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1951 to 1953 and then two years as ambassador to Argentina.
Spasowski's first tour as Polish ambassador to the United States lasted from 1955 to 1961. He was the youngest member of the ambassadorial corps at the time. He kept a low profile during the
Cold War with the exception his annual appearances at observances marking the anniversary of theWarsaw ghetto uprising of 1943. His and his family's commitment to religious tolerance led him to denounce Polishanti-Semitism during these occasions. In a speech in 1958, Spasowski said, 'I will not say to you here that in Poland anti-Semitism has been eliminated.'In 1964, Spasowski represented Poland as a member of the
International Commission for Supervision and Control inVietnam , which was established to mediate peace between Hanoi and Saigon during theVietnam War . From 1967 till 1971 Spasowski served as Poland's ambassador to India.In the mid-1970s, Spasowski was named Deputy Foreign Minister in the Polish Foreign Ministry.In the mid-1970's he also served as the Chief of the Polish Military Mission in West Berlin.
econd U.S. Ambassadorial Tour and Defection
Spasowski returned to the United States for a second tour as ambassador in 1978.
Spasowski's wife had been a practicing Catholic for many years. The former Wanda Alina Sikorski was a cousin of Poland's former prime minister, Gen.
Władysław Sikorski . Wanda Spasowski's influence and religious views helped undermine her husband's belief in Communism. For years, Spasowski's faith in the Polish Communist regime had been wavering, but the ascension of a Pole to the papacy provided the impetus a clear break. The dayKarol Cardinal Wojtyła became PopeJohn Paul II , Spasowski attended a special mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral in Washington, D.C., taking a place of honor in the first pew. It marked the beginning of an increasingly contentious relationship with the Polish Foreign Ministry.The formation of
Solidarity in September 1980 deeply moved Spasowski. He is said to have privately voiced support for Solidarity's leader,Lech Wałęsa , and the labor movement's goals. Spasowski's daughter and son-in-law, supporters of Solidarity, fled to the United States early in 1981 and received asylum.In October 1981, the Polish government ordered Spasowski home. He protested, and the recall order was rescinded.
On
1981-12-13 , Polish government leader GeneralWojciech Jaruzelski started a crack-down on Solidarity, declaringmartial law .On the afternoon of
1981-12-19 , Spasowski telephoned the U.S.State Department to announce that he was defecting and requesting asylum. The next day he told a worldwide radio audience that he had defected to show support for Solidarity and Lech Wałęsa. "The cruel night of darkness and silence was spread over my country," he said.The Polish government confiscated his family's property, branded him a traitor and condemned him to death "
in absentia ".Later years
Spasowski toured the United States throughout the 1980s, denouncing the Communist regime in Poland and playing a leading role in the
U.S. Information Agency 's anti-Communist television program, 'Let Poland Be Poland'.Spasowski was baptized a Catholic in 1985.
In 1986, Spasowski published his autobiography, "The Liberation of One", and eventually became an American citizen.
After the overthrow of Communist rule in Poland in 1989, Spasowski's death sentence was revoked.
In 1993, Polish President Lech Wałęsa restored Spasowski's Polish citizenship. But the new Polish government never acknowledged Spasowski's role in the rebellion against the Communists.
Spasowski died at his home in
Oakton, Virginia , in 1995. The cause of death was cancer.Spasowski was survived by his wife, Wanda, and a daughter, Maria Grochulski, of Warsaw. His son, Władysław, died in India in 1970.
ources
*cite news|last=Greenhouse|first=Linda|title=Man in the News: Disenchanted Diplomat.|publisher=New York Times|date=
1981-12-21
*cite news|last=Binder|first=David|title=Romuald Spasowski, 74, Dies; Polish Envoy Defected to U.S.|publisher=New York Times|date=1995-08-12
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