Stefan Olszowski

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Stefan Olszowski
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
July 1982 – 12 November 1985
Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Rakowski
Preceded by Józef Czyrek
Succeeded by Marian Orzechowski
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
22 December 1971 – 2 December 1976
Preceded by Stefan Jędrychowski
Succeeded by Emil Wojtaszek
Personal details
Born (1931-08-28) 28 August 1931 (age 92)
Torun, Poland
Nationality Polish
Political party Polish United Workers' Party

Stefan Olszowski (born 28 August 1931) is a Polish politician, who was a member of the Polish United Workers' Party. He served as the foreign minister of the People's Republic of Poland for two terms.

Biography

Olszowski was born in Torun on 28 August 1931.[1] He was a member of the Politburo of the Polish United Workers' party from December 1970 to his resignation on 12 November 1985.[2][3] He served as the propaganda chief of the party in the late 1960s and at the beginning of the 1970s.[4][5]

He was appointed foreign minister on 22 December 1971, succeeding Stefan Jędrychowski.[6] He was in office until 2 December 1976 when Emil Wojtaszek replaced him in the post.[6] In 1980, he was appointed ambassador to East Germany and left the politburo for this post that he held just six months.[3] Then he continued to serve at the politburo.[3] He acted as the party's central committee secretary for ideology and media from August 1980 to July 1982.[7][8] Then he was secondly appointed foreign minister in July 1982, replacing Józef Czyrek in the post.[8] Before his appointment as foreign minister he run for the presidency of the party, but he was not elected.[9] His term as foreign minister ended on 12 November 1985.[10] He was also dismissed from the party leadership in 1985, partly due to his relationship with a Polish journalist whom he married after divorcing his first spouse.[11] Then he settled in New York in 1986.[12]

Views and activities

Under the Edward Gierek's rule in the party, Olszowski was a reformist.[13] However, later he became a hard-liner politician and a supporter of the Soviet Union while he was in office.[12] In March 1968, he was the leading orchestrator of the anti-Semitic campaign began in Poland.[4] In November 1973, he paid an official visit to Rome that was the first official visit to the Vatican by a Polish government minister since World War II.[14][15] However, during the visit of Pope to Poland from 16 to 23 June 1983 he and Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Rakowski directly attacked on some of the Pope's pronouncements.[16]

Olszowski together with other hard-liners strived for an armed confrontation with the Solidarity movement.[17] He was instrumential in cracking down the movement at its initial phase.[12]

References

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