In 1950 he went to Warsaw in search of work. He was directed to the masonry brigade. He quickly became a shock worker and then a foreman.[6] He took part in the construction of Nowa Huta.[7] From the 1950s he was an active activist in trade unions. From 1968 he belonged to the Polish United Workers' Party.[8] He was delegate for the VIII, IX and X Congress of the Polish United Workers' Party. In 1979, the Congress of Trade Unions elected him a member of the World Federation of Trade Unions.
Siwak wrote nomerous autobiographic books after retirement, reflecting on his personal journey from mason to diplomat, his political conversion from communist and atheist to nationalist and Catholic, expatiating the socio-political changes in Poland during his lifetime.[12] In 2001, a biopic was released.[13] Towards the end of his life, he aligned with the radical panslavic movement and engaged in bogus archeology.[14] He and his wife had three children.[12]
Publications
Od łopaty do dyplomaty. Wydawnictwo Projekt, Warszawa 2000. ISBN83-87168-21-1.
Rozdarte życie. Wydawnictwo Projekt, Warszawa 2000. ISBN83-87168-23-8.
^"Doc. 4880: Situation in Poland and East-West Relations". Documents: Working Papers of the Thirty-Fourth Ordinary Session, First Part, Volume 2. Stausborg: Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. 19 April 1982. p. 58. 10. The most prominent of hardliners are Albin Siwak, a member of the Politburo and Tadeusz Grebski