Background
Urban was born into an assimilated Polish-Jewish family in Łódź. His father was an activist of the Polish Socialist Party as well as the Bund.
Urban was born into an assimilated Polish-Jewish family in Łódź. His father was an activist of the Polish Socialist Party as well as the Bund.
Jerzy Urban reportedly attended 17 different primary and high schools and completed his senior high school exams as an external student. He also studied at the University of Warsaw but was expelled.
Before 1989
In 1939, during the issuing of his Soviet Idaho in Soviet-occupied Lwow, an official confused the letters in his name (ch – х in Russian, was transcribed as н – corresponding to the Latin n). He started his journalistic career at the Nowa Wieś. From 1955 to 1957, he was a reporter and commentator for the weekly Po prostu, which started during the "rehabilitation" of Władysław Gomułka, who eventually became communist party leader.
However, the newspaper was closed by the personal initiative of Gomułka.
This symbolized the end of the thaw which the premiere had himself started. The newspaper was shut down mainly because of the biting, uncompromising opinion articles by Urban.
Urban himself was officially banned from publishing under his own name. From 1961, he worked for the weekly Polityka, continuing his opinion pieces under pseudonyms.
He was eventually totally forbidden from carrying out any journalistic activities.
This ban continued until Gomułka lost power as party leader. From August 1981 to April 1989, Jerzy Urban was a government spokesman and press secretary to General Wojciech Jaruzelski"son He created the tradition of weekly press conferences, transmitted by the Polish television and attended by both Polish and foreign journalists.
In September 1984, during the month before the murder of the priest Jerzy Popiełuszko, he wrote a column "Seanse nienawiści" (hate session), criticizing the priest as an anti-communist Savonarola.
In 1986 Urban masterminded a media story that the United States had betrayed the Solidarity movement. On 3 June he met with a Washington Post reporter and told him that a Polish spy for the Central Intelligence Agency, who was later identified as Ryszard Kukliński, was aware of the plan to install martial law in 1981 and had passed that information on to Washington.
"The United States administration could have publicly revealed these plans to the world and warned Solidarity," Urban said, "Had it done so, the implementation of martial law would have been impossible." At a 6 June press conference Urban alleged that "Washington.. did not warn its allies. lieutenant did not boast of its agent as it customarily does." According to Urban, the Reagan administration had "lied to its own people and to its friends in Poland," when it denied having prior knowledge of martial law.
After 1989
He suffered a landslide defeat and since then gave up attempts to actively participate in politics.
In 1989 he established Nie, a satirical weekly newspaper, infamous for often employing profanity in its pages. He has been the chief editor ever since and the newspaper itself has sizable audience. In 2005, he was fined by a Polish court for insulting the visiting Pope John Paul World War II
Urban married three times.
Quotations: "The United States administration could have publicly revealed these plans to the world and warned Solidarity,".
Group for mass media February-April 1990. Journalists’ Association of Polish People"s Republic since 1982. Polish Writers’ Union.
Married 3rd Malgorzata Daniszewska in 1986.