My Journey describes my personal experiences during the five years of nazi occupation in the Netherlands over the course of WWII. The undeniable torture and murder of over six million Jews and further three million people deemed unwanted by the brutal nazis took place from 1938 to 1945. These were events I was witness to, and I feel that it is my duty to tell my story.
It is my hope and prayer that this book will add to your education and understanding of the Holocaust. May this knowledge stimulate you to make a positive difference in our world, so this never happens again.

Carla Olman Peperzak
A Holocaust survivor who has lived in Spokane, WA since 2004, Carla Peperzak risked her life to help others as a member of the Resistance while living under Nazi occupation in Holland. Carla was born in Holland in 1923. She grew up in Amsterdam with her family, which was close-knit and fairly well-to-do. Her father was Jewish, and her mother was born Catholic, but raised in a Jewish family when her parents died. Carla’s comfortable, normal childhood included vacations on the coast, field hockey, rowing, ice skating and sailing. She loved school and dreamed of one day becoming a doctor. Carla’s family also lived very near Anne Frank and her family and attended the same Reform temple.
When the Nazis invaded Holland in 1940, everything changed. The following year, Jews had to register with the German authorities. Carla was required to have an ID card with a large “J” on it. In 1942 the Nazis went a step further and forced all Dutch Jews to wear the Star of David on their clothes. Carla’s father, however, acquired papers from a lawyer that identified Carla, her sister, and her mother all as non-Jewish, allowing them greater freedom.
Carla was able to enroll in a medical technology program, and while working in a hospital she stole a German ID and bought a German nurse’s uniform. With this disguise, she became active in the Resistance. Her first job, in 1942, was to find a place for her uncle and his family to hide in the countryside. She was able to do the same for about forty other people, and helped them obtain food, medical supplies, and fake IDS. Carla often biked for hours to visit those hiding outside the city.
Although her immediate family survived, about seventy-five percent of Carla’s extended family was killed in the Holocaust. After the war, Carla married her husband Paul, who was Catholic. In 1948 they left Holland, and they and their four children lived on four different continents because of Paul’s work with the United Nations and the World Bank. She and Paul eventually settled in the U.S. and became citizens in 1958.
Carla has been sharing her story with students and the community members since 1992 and continues to inspire all of us with her bravery, kindness and spirit.