The soldiers were affected very badly a lot of them went mentally ill because they saw their friends and the other fellow soldiers die in very harsh killings.
there is was no way of shell shock but if they kept their minds active they had more chance of not getting it
There might be World War 1 veterans alive but most of them died from shellshock
the trenches affected the soldiers during ww1 ww2 by supplying some cover for the soldiers and they were also a living hell because they held water and were often soaked by blood from fallen comrades
Ghandi
when the ww1 ended and if they were very hurt
there is was no way of shell shock but if they kept their minds active they had more chance of not getting it
There might be World War 1 veterans alive but most of them died from shellshock
the trenches affected the soldiers during ww1 ww2 by supplying some cover for the soldiers and they were also a living hell because they held water and were often soaked by blood from fallen comrades
They could get severe mental disorders because of the horrific things they had seen whilst fighting. They could suffer from things like shellshock. Not only this, but they could come home with terrible wounds that may not allow them to speak, hear, smell or see. All of their senses could be cut off. Hoped this helped. Eleanor.x
Yes!
Ghandi
they were hungry
when the ww1 ended and if they were very hurt
no it was the fire from the artillary batterys that caused shellshock because bombs were always explosions going of so they could not get much sleep
They were soldiers.
Russia
yes they did.