Wednesday, November 6, 2019
The Long Walk The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz essays
The Long Walk The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz essays    Slavomir Rawicz was born in the city of Pinsk (today a city in White     Russia) in 1915, to a Polish father and a Russian Mother.           In Pinsk, The Rawicz family lived a relatively well-to-do life.  They     not only owned a successful estate business, but a beautiful house within           Slavomir grew into a young man, and he entered the Wawelberea and     Rotwanda Technical School in Warsaw.  There, he studied for a certificate           In 1937, Slavomir was called up for military service in the Polish     Army.  He served a long twelve months in the infantry training school in     the city of Brest Lotvsk (also a city in modern-day White Russia).  Soon,     after the completion of his infantry training, he volunteered for     additional training within the cavalry reconnaissance division of the     Polish Army, where, in 1937, he graduated with the highest possible cadet     rankthat of a Cavalry Brigade Officer.           Immediately after his promotion, Slavomir returned to Warsaw, re-     entered Wawelberea and Rotwanda, and graduated in 1938.  Soon after, in     1939, and right before the beginning of the war, Slavomir married his  first           After the German Wermacht (German Armed Forces) invaded Poland on     September 1, 1939, he was called up to duty, and was sent west with his     cavalry brigade to the front lines.  However, despite tremendous effort,     after one month of fighting, Poland surrendered to the German forces.           After the surrender, Rawicz decided to return to familiar surroundings     in eastern Poland, and he returned to his house in Pinsk.  Unfortunately,     this move was a pivotal misstep, leading to the circumstances described in           Seventeen days after the Germans began World War II, the city of     Pinsk, as well as the entire area eastern Poland,  were occupied by the           On November 19th, 1939, soon after his return to his family home, and     during his mother's "welcome home" party,  Slav...     
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