Answer:
Europeans left their homes following the war looking for their family or to find a safe place. Many of them had seen their homes destroyed and lost their families in the war.close to 40 million Europeans had died, two thirds of them civilians constant bombing and shelling had turned cities to rubble ground war had destroyed most of the countryside displaced people from nations were left homeless some of the civilians tried to continue on with life after the war, living in partially destroyed homes/apartments or huddled in cellars or caves made from rubble no water, no electricity, very little food many wandered around trying to find a safe place to live or find their family
Step-by-step explanation:
close to 40 million Europeans had died, two thirds of them civilians constant bombing and shelling had turned cities to rubble ground war had destroyed most of the countryside displaced people from nations were left homeless some of the civilians tried to continue on with life after the war, living in partially destroyed homes/apartments or huddled in cellars or caves made from rubble no water, no electricity, very little food many wandered around trying to find a safe place to live or find their family.fighting had destroyed European's countryside agriculture had become disrupted transportation system destroyed, so the meager harvests didn't reach the cities thousands died of disease and famine a post war winter brought more suffering as people had no shoes or coats postwar governments and politics the Europeans often blamed their leader for war and its aftermath and they find it difficult to return to original government much of the old leadership was in disgrace the Communist party promised change and in both France and Italy communist party membership skyrocketed the communists staged a series of violent attacks, hoping for a political takeover, but the French and Italians reacted by voting anti communist and its influence began to