Marianna Bienkiewicz


Marianna Bienkiewicz (born August 15, 1936 in Radom) is a Polish clerk, activist of the democratic opposition in the People's Republic of Poland. Curriculum vitae

Graduated from the Third High School in Radom (1954). She was then employed as a mental worker in the Intercontinental Cable Company (until 1959), the District Court (up to 1962) and the Cooperative Labor of the Various (until 1991). In 1980 she became a member of the "Solidarity", chairing the factory commission at her workplace. After the introduction of martial law she was involved in underground activities, in January 1982 she was temporarily arrested, in May of that year she was sentenced to 10 months of imprisonment with conditional suspension of her execution for a period of three years. After the dismissal, she continued her opposition activities as an editor of "Wolny Robotnik", as well as a distributor of the second circulation (including "Tygodnik Mazowsze"). She worked with the Primate Committee and the Helsinki Committee. She belonged to the Radom Civic Committee.

From 1990 to 2001, the Democratic Action, Democratic Union and Freedom Union were active in the Civic Movement. In 2006 she joined the Civic Platform. She was the director of the parliamentary office of Piotr Nowiny-Konopka, and in 2001 assumed the same function at Ewa Kopacz.

In 2011 President Bronislaw Komorowski, for outstanding achievements in the work for democratic change in Poland, for his achievements in the benefit of the country for his professional and social work, awarded him with the Officer's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta.

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