That year, at the age of 18, Carla joined the Dutch resistance. She helped save her aunt, uncle, and two cousins, hiding them at a farmhouse in the Dutch countryside. Later, disguised as a German nurse, Carla rescued her young cousin from a train bound for Westerbork, a transit camp for Dutch Jews who were then sent to killing centers in Nazi-occupied Poland. Throughout the war, she continued to secure hiding places for Jews, published an underground newspaper, and created fake identification papers and ration cards. While Carla and her immediate family survived the Holocaust, 18 members of her family did not. In the aftermath of the war, she met her husband Paul, a Dutch Catholic. In the ensuing decades, Carla lived and traveled across the world with her husband, who worked for the United Nations. In 2004 she moved to Spokane and has been actively engaged in sharing her story as part of the Holocaust Center for Humanity’s Speakers Bureau.
- In Memory Of My Family Lost in the Holocaust – By Carla Peperzak
- Biography
- “Freedom fighter: Spokane’s Carla Peperzak protected fellow Jews through Dutch Resistance” (The Spokesman-Review, 2015)
- Carla’s Video “Courage” at the Washington State Magazine
- Carla’s Advice (2020, 46″)
- Impacting Generations – Rockwood Retirement video featuring resident Carla Peperzak (3:49)
- Carla Peperzak Middle School opens 2023-2024 school year








