From 1924 onwards, Roth had also worked as an editor for the
Godesberger Volkszeitung ("Godesberg People's Daily"), the party newspaper of the Godesberg Centre Party. He published many articles criticizing the Nazis. After the Nazis had
seized power in Germany, Roth and Godesburg Mayor Josef Zander (1878–1951) was put on forced leave and put in protective custody for one day on 13 March 1933, thanks to the efforts of Heinrich Alef(1897–1966). Recorded in the Burgschule history where he worked as a teacher, is this: On 3 June 1933, again under massive pressure from Alef, now the National Socialist mayor of Bad Godesberg, he was forced from his position as deputy county council and his position as Chairman of the Centre Party lay in Bad Godesberg. A few weeks later, on 6 April, Alef wrote in his office as a state commissioner to attempt to offset Roth as a teacher: Nevertheless, in 1935 he was still working as a teacher at the Bad Godesberg Burgschule. Only in 1935 was Alef successful, and Roth was transferred to the elementary school of Friesdorf. In the same year his brother, vicar Ernst Moritz Roth, was also in big trouble with the Nazis. When the war broke out in 1939 Roth was initially drafted into the army, but due to an acute shortage of teachers and his age, he was dismissed in 1940. After Roth's return from the front, he met secretly with his friend Hans Karl Rosenberg (1891–1942, martyr of the catholic church): Rosenberg died on 17 April 1942 as a result of a medical "non-assistance" because his father was Jewish. From 1940 to 1944 Roth had been working as a teacher in Friesdorf. On 22 August 1944, after the
attempt on Hitler's life,
Operation Valkyrie, he was arrested during the
Operation Gewitter (operation storm), confined a day later in the Cologne
Gestapo prison
EL-DE Haus, and from there with other former members of the Reichstag and politicians, democratic parties (including with
Konrad Adenauer (1876–1967), Thomas Esser (1870–1948), Josef Baumhoff (1887–1962), Peter Schlack (1875–1957), Otto Gerig (1885–1944, martyr of the catholic church), Peter Paffenholz (1900–1959), Peter Knab (1885–1963) and Hubert Peffeköver) was transferred in the labor camp (Arbeitserziehungslager) in the former exhibition halls in Cologne-Deutz. During his internment in the halls, his son Wilhelm (1932–1995) was questioned by the Gestapo headquarters of Cologne. On 16 September 1944 Roth, Gerig, Schlack, Baumhoff, Knab and Peffeköver with other former politicians and also with the priest Alexander Heinrich Alef (1885–1945) were deported to
Buchenwald. Roth's camp number 81555 had previously been the late Resistance fighter Victor Delplanque's. Together with Baumhoff, Gerig, Knap, Peffeköver and Schlack, he was placed in the cell block 45. His younger brother Willi, to this time the Prior of the Dominican convent in Berlin, tried unsuccessfully through a well-known secretary in the
Reich Chancellery to help his brother. When he was released on 28 October 1944, Roth was given a so-called fuel injection (injection of phenol) by the concentration camp doctor. Shortly before the end of the year, Roth was ordered by the Gestapo to leave the Rhineland and go to Leipzig, but his brother Ernst hid him with a friend's family in Dattenfeld. At Christmas, weakened by the effect of the lethal injection, he was allowed to return home. ==Death==