Corrie begins telling of her home in the beje on top of the family watch shop. At forty-five she is still unmarried and she and her sister live with their father. Corrie recalls her life for the past forty-five years; her widowed aunts moving in; her mother's death, the struggles of their shop, and her first day of school. She also tells of the Jews hiding in the beje.
Then Corrie tells of her capture. On February 28, 1944, she woke up to hear people breaking in to the beje. Then a man burst into her bedroom and dragged her downstairs, where she found her father and Betsie being questioned. After that they took them all captive and sent them to prison. There, they put them on trial and decided to send them to concentration camps.
The first concentration camp they arrived at was called Vught; but they didn't stay there long. From there they were transported by trains to Ravensbruck in Germany. When they arrived they were told to turn in all of their belongings; including their clothes. Since Betsie had a stomach virus, they took it for advantage and asked if they could use the toilets. What they really did though, was hide their Bible there so that after the inspection they could get it back. They were both assigned to Barracks 28 where they began their ministry. Betsie decided that they should thank God for the fleas, because there were so many of them that the guards rarely inspected the Barracks. The knitting areas were so crowded that all the women in Barracks 28 had to sit on their beds to knit. While they knitted Corrie and Betsie read scriptures and brought many other women to Christ.
After being at Ravensbruck for several months, Betsie became very ill. She was sent to the hospital, but they