In January 1944 the second group of the arrested students is sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp. They are taught by university professors from Jena University, who are driven to Buchenwald to teach them, also in racial studies.
In January 1944, the second group of the arrested students is sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp. There they are treated as "ordinary" prisoners, but after three weeks they are put in a camp in the camp and treated as civilian internees. They are taught by university professors from Jena University, who are driven into Buchenwald to teach them, among other things. in racial studies. In October 1944, they are sent to Alsace to reunite with the first group of student prisoners. As the war progresses, they are forced back to Germany under the leadership of SS Ûberscharführer Joachim Wilde. When they refuse to take part in military service, he threatens to shoot them. They nevertheless carry out a strike, and as punishment they are all sent back to Buchenwald. How did they survive, after all, and what made this group of student prisoners suffer fewer casualties than many other groups of prisoners? In this part we meet, among others, Ûberschaführer Joachim Wilde, the students' trustee Arnljot Gaare, the director's father Elling Kvamme and others.—OJT