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Overview of the Zdzisław Rurarz Papers

Finding aid prepared by Hoover Institution Archives Staff Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6010 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 2014

Overview of the Zdzisław Rurarz 2014C27 1 Papers Title: Zdzisław Rurarz papers Date (inclusive): 1967-2008 Collection Number: 2014C27 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: Polish Physical Description: 9 manuscript boxes(4.5 linear feet) Abstract: Correspondence, writings, biographical data, and photographs, relating to political conditions in , the defection of Zdzisław Rurarz to the in 1981, and international relations. Location note: Hoover Institution Archives. Creator: Rurarz, Zdzisław. Access The collection is open for research. The Hoover Institution Archives only allows access to copies of audiovisual items. To listen to sound recordings or to view videos or films during your visit, please contact the Archives at least two working days before your arrival. We will then advise you of the accessibility of the material you wish to see or hear. Please note that not all audiovisual material is immediately accessible. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Accruals Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. To determine if this has occurred, find the collection in Stanford University's online catalog at http://searchworks.stanford.edu/ . Materials have been added to the collection if the number of boxes listed in the catalog is larger than the number of boxes listed in this finding aid. Acquisition Information Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 2014. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Zdzisław Rurarz papers, [Box no.], Hoover Institution Archives Biographical/Historical note Zdzisław Maciej Rurarz was born in 1930 in Pionki, a small town south of . He joined a communist youth organization at sixteen and the Polish United Workers' Party (PUWP) several years later. He earned degrees in economics, and taught at the Warsaw School of Economics through the 1970s, and for a while served as economic adviser to the first secretary of the PUWP, Edward Gierek. By the time Rurarz was appointed ambassador to Japan, however, he was thoroughly disillusioned with and Poland's role as a Soviet dependency. The rise of the Solidarity trade union and the looming threat of a military crackdown hastened his decision to defect. In , when Poland's communist authorities declared martial law and arrested thousands of Solidarity activists, Rurarz and Romuald Spasowski, Polish ambassador to the United States, protested by renouncing their allegiance to the Moscow-dominated government in Warsaw and seeking political asylum in the United States. After contacting US diplomats in Tokyo, Rurarz made a daring escape to the US embassy, along with his wife and daughter. He was immediately declared a traitor and tried in absentia by a military court in Warsaw. The sentence was death, revocation of his Polish citizenship, and confiscation of all property. When, after the negotiated 1989 "round-table" agreement between the communist regime and the opposition, and the first semifree elections in the Soviet bloc, Rurarz was again sadly disappointed. One act of the new, Solidarity-led government was a revising of the case against him, commuting his death penalty to twenty-five years in prison. Instead of embracing prominent Polish defectors such as Rurarz, Spasowski, and the CIA's top agent in the Warsaw Pact, Colonel Ryszard Kukliński, the new Polish authorities regarded them as traitors. Eventually, the court annulled the sentence and declared complete "rehabilitation," but Rurarz never reconciled himself to the strange mixture of the new and the old represented by the governments of postcommunist Poland and its political elites. He never went back to Warsaw and spent his remaining years writing and speaking his mind, mostly to émigré audiences. Rurarz's death in 2007 was practically unnoticed by the Polish media. Scope and Contents note The Rurarz papers consist mostly of his articles and other publications, speeches, and interviews, as well as correspondence, virtually all from the period after his defection. Subjects and Indexing Terms Diplomats--Poland.

Overview of the Zdzisław Rurarz 2014C27 2 Papers Japan--Foreign relations--Poland. Poland--Foreign relations--Japan Poland--History--1980-1989.

Overview of the Zdzisław Rurarz 2014C27 3 Papers