History /
Question on Poland 1980-82 (the history of Solidarity during the years of 1980 and 1981) [17]
Answering only regarding things I know about:
What kind of booze/beer and cigs where available? I'd imagine that Russian beer, Zhigulevskoye, and Yava cigarettes were common... Any Marlboro Reds? :)
There were coupons for vodka. I believe it was a bottle per month. Beer was rather available but hard liquor was the preferred dope, and defacto an indicator of the US Dollar value. $1.00 equaled 1 (half liter) bottle of Zytnia Vodka (give or take a sip)
All Polish cigs were available in stores (some Marlboro reds too) but the coupons were sufficient for 10 packs/month. Anything could be bought through Pewex (kind internal export where you could buy most "deficit" products for hard currency)
You could buy cigs from the Polish or Soviet troops by the pound (or kilo, rather). These came in the form of really long cigarettes you had to cut to practical length. The longest one I saw was about 5 feet long, but nothing above 8" was "smokeable", no kick.
People traded coupons. I gave away my vodka coupon for cig coupons.
Some people made moonshine.
Was Afghanistan and your view common and openly discussed then?
It was discussed but most people didn't know a whole lot. I knew more than most.
As for music, the scene was pretty rich (considering...). There was quite a lively movement within musicians who concentrated on politics, illustrated the reality, kept up the hopes etc. Some names Kaczmarski, Gintrowski, Ewa Bem and lots of others. Some mainstream musicians touched on politics too, but that would be sometimes hard to translate due to the subtlety of some of the language we used - to say things we wanted to say but could not say openly.