WARSAW (AFP) — Bronislaw Geremek, an icon in the struggle against communist rule in Poland and founding member of the Solidarity trade union, died in a car accident Sunday. He was 76.
Tributes poured in from across Europe for the member of the European Parliament and leading scholar of medieval history, who was a legendary figure in the anti-communist opposition and in the post-communist era served as foreign minister between 1997 and 2000.
He was elected to the EU parliament in 2004 on the list of Solidarity, the trade union group that led the opposition in Poland before the fall of the communist regime.
Geremek died when the car in which he was travelling suddenly crossed to the other side of the road before hitting an oncoming vehicle near the town of Lubien, police spokeswoman Hanna Wachowiak said.
In heartfelt tributes, European leaders praised Geremek's commitment to the continent and both friends and political foes in Poland mourned his loss.
"Polish science and politics have lost a great man. Many of us have lost a friend," said Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in a statement.
Former president Aleksander Kwasniewski, an ex-communist who converted to social democracy, said he was "shocked. This is an enormous loss."
Kwasniewski met Geremek during the 1989 round table talks in which General Wojciech Jaruzelski's communist regime negotiated away its power, where Geremek was Lech Walesa's chief negotiator.
"He was one of the fathers of Polish democracy," Kwasniewski said.
As well as being Poland's foreign minister, Geremek headed the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in 1998.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso expressed "immense sadness" at his death, saying Geremek was a "European of exceptional greatness, a Pole of unwavering convictions."
"I would like future generations to remember Bronislaw Geremek as an example of a free spirit, and that he remain in our memory as one of the most powerful symbols of freedom from all oppression," said Barroso.
The European Parliament and many across the EU rallied behind Geremek last year when Polish authorities threatened to strip him of his mandate as a member of the European Parliament.
He had refused to file a statement saying whether he had ties to the communist-era secret police, saying the new law aimed at purging public life of ex-communist agents was "creating an Orwellian-style ministry of truth".
His defiant stand led to him being removed from an honorary post in Poland, but the constitutional court decided he could retain his European mandate.
The case provoked a strong reaction in France, and on Sunday French President Nicolas Sarkozy paid tribute "to the memory of this exceptional man, a respected European parliamentarian who through his courage, his humility and his commitment without fail in the service of fundamental rights, embodied the founding values of the European ideal."
Former French president Jacques Chirac also remembered his friend, a "historic figure" who "embodied European values at the highest level."
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said he was "profoundly shocked and saddened" to learn of the death of his friend.
"We have lost an extraordinary man, an engaging and remarkable European" who fought "to bring democracy to his country and to open institutions of the EU and NATO to the entire region of Central Europe and the east," he said.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said: "Professor Geremek played a key role in helping Poland regain its freedom after nearly 50 years of communism and in shaping Poland's future after 1989."
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was "deeply saddened" to learn of Geremek's death, saying he had spent his life "courageously fighting for the freedom of his homeland."
And in Rome, centre-left opposition leader Walter Veltroni mourned the death of "one of the protagonists in the fight for democracy on our continent."
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