Janusz Krupski

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Succeeded byJan Ciechanowski
Born9 May 1951
Died10 April 2010(2010-04-10) (aged 58)
Janusz Krupski
Janusz Krupski
Minister of Combatants and Victims of Repression
In office
19 May 2006  10 April 2010
Succeeded byJan Ciechanowski
Personal details
Born9 May 1951
Died10 April 2010(2010-04-10) (aged 58)
AwardsOrder of Polonia Restituta

Janusz Krupski (9 May 1951 10 April 2010) was a Polish historian, member of the democratic opposition to communist rule in Poland during the People's Republic of Poland and a government official.

Krupski acquired his degree in history at the Lublin Catholic University in 1975. While there he became friends with other future opposition leaders, such as Piotr Jegliński and Bogdan Borusewicz (who in 2010 briefly served as President of Poland, after the death of Lech Kaczynski in the same plane crash in which Krupski died).[1] Between 1977 and 1988 he was the chief editor of the independent, non-censored, underground[1] journal Spotkania ("Meetings"). Originally Krupski planned to steal a ditto machine from the Socialist Union of Polish Students office to print the journal, but eventually decided that that was too risky. Instead Jegliński managed to obtain the machine in Paris, while on a study trip; he worked at a Paris pizzeria to get the money for it. The printing machine (private ownership of which was illegal under communism) was smuggled back into Poland by shipping it with a theater troupe as supposedly a piece of a stage set. It was the first underground, privately owned oppositionist printing machine in post-World War II Poland. The first work printed on the machine was George Orwell's Animal Farm, also unavailable in communist Poland, although the quality of the material was so low due to the inexperience of Krupski and others that the copies had to be discarded. The students also used the printing machine to produce pamphlets outlining violations of human rights by the communist government in Poland which were then smuggled to the West.[1]

While still a student, Janusz met his future wife, Joanna.[1]

Martial law and afterwards

In post communist Poland

References

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