To Kill a Priest: The Murder of Father Popieluszko and the Fall of Communism

To Kill a Priest: The Murder of Father Popieluszko and the Fall of Communism

by KevinRuane (Author)

Synopsis

To Kill a Priest captures the wide ramifications of the story of Father Jerzy Popieluszko, a popular young parish priest in a Warsaw suburb who steadfastly spoke out from his pulpit against the abuses of communism and supported the then-banned Solidarity trade union. Abducted by the Polish secret police on 19th October 1984, his savagely beaten body was found 11 days later in an icy reservoir. Kevin Ruane documents how, for the first time, a communist government was forced to try and condemn the repressive actions of its own security agents and admit its own wrong-doing. It proved to be the decisive crack in the fortress of Eastern Block Communism, forcing it - for the first time within its own boundaries - to share power with a non-Communist organisation: the Solidarity trade union. The lingering suspicions that not all the guilty were brought to justice, within this compelling tale in which Father Popieluszko's determined heroism - in stark contrast to the dark years of coercion and cynicism behind the Iron Curtain - places the combative Popieluszko alongside history's other freedom fighters such as Nelson Mandela and Che Guevara.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 406
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Gibson Square Books Ltd
Published: 04 Jun 2004

ISBN 10: 1903933544
ISBN 13: 9781903933541

Media Reviews
'A dramatic story and Kevin Ruane tells it with pace.' Peter Conradi Sunday Times 'Everyone who would like to find out how communism was finally defeated should read this profound and well-documented book.' LECH WALESA, Nobel Peace-Prize Winner / former Leader of Solidarity and President of Poland
Author Bio
Kevin Ruane read Classics at Peterhouse and worked at the top secret GCHQ Cheltenham before joining the BBC. A journalist for over 30 years and one of the BBC's most experienced reporters, Ruane covered the Sakharov human rights movement from 1977 as BBC Moscow correspondent and thereafter the nascent Solidarity movement from 1980-1986 as the BBC's Warsaw correspondent. He previously wrote The Polish Challenge (1982, BBC Books).