Content item 4.3-ARGA with quiz

Steel was king in the postwar Soviet bloc. On both sides of the iron curtain, economic recovery required the development of heavy industry, but socialist planners were especially eager to promote large-scale industrial production centered on coal, iron, and steel. Following Soviet examples, East Bloc countries built massive industrial works and model socialist cities to house the workers. Among these was Nowa Huta (NOH-vuh HOO-tuh; New Foundry), a steel town erected in the early 1950s on the outskirts of Kraków, Poland.

Nowa Huta was one of the grandest construction projects of the Stalinist era. By the mid-1960s Polish leaders bragged that the massive Lenin steelworks produced more steel per day than any foundry in Europe. They were equally proud of the city that surrounded the mills, also built with Soviet assistance. The monumental Central Square, complete with an imposing statue of Lenin, was the center of the planned city. Streets radiated out into blocks of workers’ apartment buildings designed by socialist architects. In theory, Nowa Huta brought together working and living space and included everything a working family might need: green space, department and grocery stores, recreation facilities, kindergartens and schools, cultural centers, and an extensive streetcar system. And indeed, Nowa Huta created real opportunities for Polish workers. Many moved from the farm to the city, where they enjoyed relatively good housing and good wages. By 1957 over one hundred thousand people lived in Nowa Huta, most of them employed at the steelworks.

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The main square of Nowa Huta with the Lenin Works foundry in the background. (© Sovfoto)

According to propagandists, cities like Nowa Huta proved that the East could surpass the West in terms of industrial output while creating humane and equitable living spaces. At mass rallies and workplace meetings — attendance was mandatory — workers and their families listened to lengthy speeches about the honor of simple labor and the superiority of socialism. But the grand experiment reveals some of the weaknesses of the East Bloc economy. Under party oversight and strict workplace discipline, workers labored to meet demanding production quotas. Despite protests from the mostly Catholic workers, the Communist authorities sought to repress religious belief and refused to build a church until 1966. Pollution from the foundry fouled the air and damaged Kraków’s historic architecture. And by the mid-1970s the steel produced by the “tiger nations” of East Asia was better and less expensive than that made at Nowa Huta; the foundry could no longer compete in global markets. The Communist Party clung to its vision of the workers’ state, and continued government subsidies helped bankrupt the Polish state. Today, much of the plant is closed, but visitors can still explore an important example of socialist planning and ponder everyday life in a model industrial suburb.

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According to socialist planners, the newly built workers’ apartments at Nowa Huta had everything a growing family could want, but the pleasant scene depicted in this photo stands in contrast to the difficult working conditions and the state repression of Catholicism that led to popular unrest. (© Sovfoto)
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This photo from a 1951 May Day parade in Nowa Huta depicts marchers carrying posters of (from left to right) Marx, a Polish Communist leader, Lenin, and Engels. (Wiktor Pental/visavis.pl)

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