No, Yes
Soldiers were not sent home on leave from the military in World War 1 such as they are today. Soldiers were only sent home if they were injured, were no longer needed, or if they had died.
Soldiers went home if they were injured. Other times they would go home for a break.
1945
Soldiers always adapt - no matter how.
guns children food
Soldiers were not sent home on leave from the military in World War 1 such as they are today. Soldiers were only sent home if they were injured, were no longer needed, or if they had died.
Soldiers went home if they were injured. Other times they would go home for a break.
they were granted leave only if there was a very special reason but usually if they wanted to go home they would be formally discharged
Rarely. If they were in the trenches, the danger was too great to leave. If a soldier was able to leave for home, it wasn't more than once a year. most soldiers were honourably discharged after various injuries such as trench foot
1945
Soldiers always adapt - no matter how.
guns children food
In "Soldier's Home" by Ernest Hemingway, Krebs decides to leave home because he struggles to readjust to civilian life after returning from World War I. He feels disconnected from his family and community, and longs for the simplicity and camaraderie of military life. Krebs also experiences difficulty in connecting with those around him, leading him to feel alienated and isolated.
soldiers did nothing they wre poor soldiers did nothing they wre poor
women were making army tanks and guns and sending them to the soldiers to help them win and they were making food and sending it over and making new technologys to help the war
They wrote letters.
The czar band polish and the soldiers were corrupted. If you were a Jew the burned their houses and the stores that is all.