Nationality Polish. Occupation Journalist | Name Leopold Labedz | |
Born January 22, 1920 ( 1920-01-22 ) Simbirsk, Russian SFSR Known for Championing human rights in the Eastern Bloc Books Poland Under Jaruzelski, The use and abuse of Sovietology, Gdansk 1980: Pictures from a Strike People also search for Max Hayward, Walter Laqueur, George Urban, Priscilla Johnson McMillan |
Leopold Łabędź (22 January 1920 – 22 March 1993) was an anti-communist Anglo-Polish commentator on the Soviet Union.
Łabędź was born to a Polish Jewish doctor in Russia. The family soon returned to Warsaw and the young Łabędź decided to follow his father into the medical profession. He studied medicine in Paris. In 1939, he fled to the Soviet zone of occupation and was imprisoned by the Soviets in the Gulag.
He left the Soviet Union in 1942 as part of the Polish Army led by General Władysław Anders. After the war he studied at Bologna University before settling in London, where he studied at the London School of Economics. Strongly anti-communist, Łabędź edited Survey journal and headed the London office of Committee for the Defense of Workers known by its Polish abbreviation as KOR.
Łabędź often campaigned for the Solidarity union in Poland, and for political prisoners in the Soviet Union. Łabędź was one of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's principal champions in the West and often defended the Russian writer against the charge of anti-semitism.