Below enclosed is an interesting article (in Polish) titled “Postawy wobec narodzin ‘Solidarnosci’ i wprowadzenia stanu wojennego na przykladzie Polonii australijskiej (wybrane przyklady)” by Professor Patryk Pleskot of Instytut Pamieci Narodowej (IPN). Prof. Plescot is a historian, political scientist, graduate from Warsaw University and Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. He obtained his ‘habilitation’ title at the Institute of Political Studies (Polish Academy of Sciences) in 2015. Since 2007 he works at the Institute of National Remembrance in Warsaw (recently as a main specialist and project coordinator) from 2015 to 2021– as a professor at the Witold Pilecki State University of Malopolska in Oswiecim and from 2021 as a professor at the University of Rzeszow. In 2013 he was visiting fellow at the University of Western Sydney. He is a member of the Polish American Historical Association (PAHA) and the Baltic Intelligence and Security Studies Association (BISSA), as well as member of editorial board of the periodical ‘Pamiec i Sprawiedliwosc’ (‘Memory and Justice’). Area of his scientific interest consists of French history and historiography, political, cultural and social history of communist Poland, as well as migration studies, activities of Polish diaspora after 1945 and the history of Polish intelligence and counter-espionage apparatus. He is an author, co-author and editor of more than 20 books and about 120 scientific articles, i.a.; Niewiadomski: to kill the President (2012) – nomination for the ‘Best Varsaviana 2012/2013’ Award; Foreigners in Warsaw 1945–1989 (2012) – nomination for the ‘Best Varsaviana 2012/2013’ Award; Troublesome miss ‘S’. Political attitudes of the West towards Solidarity movement, 1980–1989 (2013) – ‘Best Historical Book of the Year 2013’ Award; Klio Award; City of the death. Question of political murders in Warsaw, 1956–1989 (2015) – Klio Award; Mountains and Files. A spoken biography of Andrzej Paczkowski (2019) – ‘Nagrody Historyczne Polityki’ Award (2020).