Answer Close-Reading Questions
Have students write their responses, or use the Close-Reading Questions to guide a discussion.
• How did World War II begin? What happened in Poland? (Analyzing Events)
World War II began when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. Hundreds of warplanes, thousands of tanks, and more than a million soldiers struck from the west, north, and south. Great Britain and France responded by declaring war on Germany. Less than three weeks later, the Soviet Union invaded Poland from the east. In German-controlled western Poland, the Nazis built concentration camps where they killed millions of Jewish people and many others from all over Europe. In Soviet-controlled eastern Poland, the Soviets forcibly removed more than 1 million Polish people from their homes and put them in forced-labor camps in remote parts of the Soviet Union.
• How does the map “Europe & the Middle East, 1942” support the article? (Map Reading)
The map supports the article by showing how much of Europe and North Africa was controlled by the Axis powers in 1942, during World War II. Great Britain and the Soviet Union fought against them as Allied countries, along with the United States. Ireland, Sweden, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, and Turkey were neutral, but almost all of the rest of Europe was under Axis control.
• How did World War II affect Polikarp Van Pyrz and his family? (Cause and Effect)
Van Pyrz was 13 years old and living on a farm with his family in eastern Poland when the war started. When he was 14, Soviet troops came to where he lived at 4 a.m. and forced his family and others to march about 15 miles to a train station. They spent almost two weeks traveling in a boxcar with no heat and little food to a labor camp in northern Russia. Van Pyrz’s brother was forced to join the Russian army. After the Soviet Union joined the Allies, Van Pyrz’s family was allowed to leave the camp in 1942. The Soviets tried to starve the Polish people to death on the train ride back. His parents and sister died on the trip. After two months, Van Pyrz jumped off the train. He found his way to Iran, Iraq, Palestine, Egypt, and eventually Great Britain, where he worked as a radar technician. Ten years after the war, Van Pyrz found and reunited with his brother.