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1-31 of 31
- A relationship with Gestapo boss Siegfried Wolfgang Fehmer drew Anne Marie Breien closer into the resistance movement.
- A documentary about the most decorated war hero in Norway, the young Gunnar "Kjakan" Sønsteby (Code named "No. 24") and his life as an undercover agent during the second world war.
- In the Second World War, twelve men were selected to prevent Hitler's dream of war supremacy in the air from becoming real. This is the commando raid Norway forgot. Two special soldiers follow the footsteps of these twelve men to reveal the truth about the forgotten mission.
- In February 1943, Joachim Rønneberg was only 23 years old when he was chosen to lead the commandos who were supposed to prevent Nazi Germans' attempt from creating an atomic bomb. The action against the heavy water factory at Vemork was carried out in such an impressive manner that it is still on the syllabus for today's special forces. In 2014, the 95-year-old Rønneberg was the last Norwegian saboteur, telling us how he experienced the dramatic action.
- Ragnar Ulstein was the freedom fighter who did flee to England to join the resistance in 1941. After the war was over, he exchanged weapons with a pen and became journalist, writer and historian. Ragnar is telling his entire story.
- Leif Vidar is most known for his own meat producing company named after himself. His son, Arne Vidar, tells the unknown story about how Leif joined the resistance group to fight against Nazis during the Second World War.
- May 8, 1945, was the day when the liberation of Norway took place. But when "Norway is free again" was told by the Home Front's leadership, there were still 350,000 fully armed German soldiers on the Norwegian soil. It was therefore not a matter of course that the liberation should take place peacefully on that day.
- In April 1940, German Nazi forces arrived at Haugsbygd, Ringerike. Thousands of Norwegian solders and volunteers gathered to fight against them in fierce battles.
- Jens-Anton Poulsson was the leader of "Operation Grouse", and one of those who made the sabotage raid against the Vermork heavy water plant successful. He always smoked pipe, could hunt reindeer, and made sure he and his three friends inside a hut got food while waiting for the rest of the troop. Previously growing up on Rjukan, he later started living at Hardangervidda where he lives as a low key mountain man who tells his unknown Tungtvann story.
- World War II started September 1, 1939, by Germany attacking Poland. On the same day, the Norwegian Navy set out to protect the neutrality of their country. When Norway was invaded by the Germans, their Navy actively participated in the war. The Navy made a significant contribution throughout the sea battle against Germany, and particularly important was the protection of the convoy routes, the Great Britain's lifeline, which was crucial to the outcome of the war. In two programs, some of those who attended and survived the war tell their stories about the youth's encounter with brutal war on the sea, loss of comrades, fear of death and anger against the enemy who had occupied Norway.
- When Blomman (Bernhardina) Steinmann lived in hiding in Oslo, she wrote letters to her daughter Ingrid Kaplan in Stockholm. Ingrid found the letters 60 years after the war.
- A reportage from the Sola Aviation Museum.