that would depend upon who 'they' were.
there was 300 men and when they got to buchenwald there was only 254 men.
12 when they had arrived in Birkenau
The German Wikipedia article on Buchenwald gives the total number of prisoners killed at Buchenwald as 56,000 - of whom 11,000 were Jews. (Note that Buchenwald not an extermination camp and was not specifically for Jews).
Around 2,000
Three left before Rev Samuel Parris arrived Link http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/salem/further.html
Accoding to the Wikipedia article on Buchenwald 56,545 prisoners perished at Buchenwald out of a total of 238,380 who entered the camp alive. This does not, however, mean that the others all survived, as many prisoners were transferred to other camps and perished there. (It was a harsh concentration camp, but not an extermination camp).
None. They all were killed, but one man was left on the island of the cyclopes, who is mentioned in the Aeneid.
80
A section of the camp has been preserved as a memorial. Much of the Buchenwald concentration camp site was destroyed, but a lot of the prisoners made memorials and many other people did the same thing.
5 or 6; it depends on when they first arrived and how many were in the camp. If they arrived when it first started then probably five but six later I would say. If you look on Google images and see there numbers you can count.
The famine in Ireland had started, so many people left the country. Some went to America.
Buchenwald was a very harsh, 'ordinary' concentration camp, not an extermination camp. About 25% of the prisoners perished. Most of these were worked to death on insufficient food. Many also died when some of the prisoners were taken on death marches in April 1945. From about late 1944 onwards some prisoners from camps further east were moved to Buchenwald.