9. A razzia was a sudden Nazi round-up; German police and Dutch helpers suddenly surrounded an area, arrested Jews and others, and took them away for deportation or forced labour.
10. Examples: printing illegal newspapers; sabotaging railways; helping downed Allied pilots; hiding Jews or resistance members. Risks included arrest, torture, execution, or being sent to concentration camps. (Any two activities + one risk.)
11. On D-Day, Allied troops (mainly American, British and Canadian) landed on the beaches of Normandy to invade Nazi-occupied France; General Eisenhower was the supreme Allied commander.
12. Operation Market Garden aimed to capture key Dutch bridges with airborne troops and push ground forces quickly into Germany to end the war by Christmas 1944; its failure left the centre and north of the Netherlands still occupied and facing hard months ahead.
13. In the Hunger Winter, the Germans blocked food and fuel to the western Netherlands; people starved, ate things like tulip bulbs, froze in the cold, and many thousands died, especially children and the elderly.
14. Possible answers: the failed German Ardennes offensive; the Red Army liberating camps like Auschwitz and moving into Germany; Allied crossing of the Rhine; American and Soviet troops meeting at the Elbe; Soviet capture of Berlin; Hitler’s suicide; Germany’s unconditional surrender on VE-Day. (Any three.)
15. Many collaborators were punished or humiliated (for example women with German boyfriends had their heads shaved); some were tried, others beaten or killed. Many Jewish survivors returned to find their homes occupied and their possessions taken, and often did not receive a warm welcome. The Nuremberg Trials aimed to hold leading Nazis legally responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity and to show that such actions would be punished.