Browse

Europe

Source

U.S. Hopes for the Future of Hungary

In the summer of 1989, President George Bush made an official visit to several East European countries, each in the midst of democratic demonstrations and public pressure on their Communist regimes.

Source

Excerpts from the sermon given by Pope John Paul II in Warsaw in 1987

This is the sermon that Pope John Paul II delivered at the open-air mass described in the previous section, and it is typical of both his rhetorical style and the substance of the sermons he delivered during his trips to Poland.

Source

Anonymous sermon from 1982

This sermon was delivered in Podkowa Leśna, a small town in central Poland near Warsaw, on October 13, 1982.

Source

Excerpt from a letter from the Episcopate to the parish clergy of Poland in 1981

This pastoral letter was issued on March 11, 1981, and sent to every priest in Poland. It summarizes the message that the bishops wanted the parish clergy to transmit to their flocks during their Sunday sermons.

Source

Prayer for the Fatherland

This prayer was composed by the Polish Episcopate shortly after Solidarity was legalized for the first time, in 1980. The bishops instructed that henceforth it be recited during every mass.

Source

Excerpts from a sermon given by Primate Stefan Wyszyński in 1976

This sermon was delivered by Cardinal Stefan Wsyzyński, the Primate of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland, on January 25, 1976, in Warsaw's Holy Cross Church.

Source

The Pledge of Jasna Góra

This text was written by Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński in 1956 and used that year for a ceremony at the Marian shrine of Jasna Góra in the town of Częstochowa. Promoted heavily by the Polish Episcopate, the pledge became a mainstay of organized pilgrimages and remains popular to this day.

Source

Margaret Thatcher's Views on Mikhail Gorbachev

In 1984, British journalist John Cole interviewed Great Britain's Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher after her meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev. The interview took place shortly before Thatcher met with current U.S. President Ronald Reagan.

Source

Reacting to German Reunification

On October 3, 1990, the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) and the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) were reunified as one single state, recreating a country that had not existed since the end of World War II.

Source

President Bush's Remarks in Warsaw, July 9, 1989

President George H. W. Bush visited Poland and Hungary in July 1989 after June elections in which Solidarity candidates won 160 of the 161 seats in the Sejm that were available to them and 92 of the 100 seats of the Polish Senate.