Mirosława Danuta Wałęsa (Polish:[mirɔˈswavadaˈnutavaˈwɛ̃sa]; néeGołoś[ˈɡɔwɔɕ]; born 25 February 1949)[1] is the wife of former President of PolandLech Wałęsa.[2] In 1983 she accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo on behalf of her husband,[2][3] who feared, at a time of great political upheaval in the country, that the Polish government might not allow him to return if he travelled to Oslo himself. Lech and Danuta have been married since 8 November 1969[4] and have eight children.
Danuta grew up the second of nine children[5] in Krypy village near Węgrów (Krypy, Gmina Liw[1]). She was working in a flower shop near the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk when she met Lech Wałęsa, then an electrician. After they married, she began using her middle name more than her first name, per Lech's request.[5] She was more resolutely anti-Communist than her husband. During her husband's frequent interrogations by the SB in the 1980s, she was known to openly taunt officers who came to pick him up.[6]
Released in 2011, Danuta Wałęsa's autobiography Marzenia i tajemnice ("Dreams and Secrets", coauthored with Piotr Adamowicz) has sold over 400,000 copies.[7]
^ abWałęsa, Danuta; Piotr Adamowicz (oprac.) (2011). Danuta Wałęsa. Marzenia i tajemnice. Cracow: Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 11. ISBN978-83-08-04741-5.
^R. W. APPLE JR., "AWARD IS ACCEPTED BY DANUTA WALESA", The New York Times, December 11, 1983, [1]
^Wałęsa, Danuta; Piotr Adamowicz (oprac.) (2011). Danuta Wałęsa. Marzenia i tajemnice. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 11. ISBN978-83-08-04741-5.
^ abWagman-Geller, Marlene (2015). Behind every great man : the forgotten women behind the world's famous and infamous. Naperville, Illinois: Sourcebooks. ISBN9781492603054. OCLC900665411.