Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HR1764 Introduced / Bill

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                    82R25102 CBE-D
 By: Gonzalez H.R. No. 1764


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, The El Paso Holocaust Museum and Study Center
 honored the memory of Holocaust victims and celebrated the
 community's Holocaust survivors on May 1, 2011, in conjunction with
 National Holocaust Remembrance Week, which began that day; and
 WHEREAS, Between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany carried out the
 systematic persecution and annihilation of six million European
 Jews, as well as millions of other people, including Roma, Poles,
 disabled individuals, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, Soviet
 prisoners of war, and political dissidents; and
 WHEREAS, Since 1980, when the United States Congress
 established the Days of Remembrance, Americans have joined together
 for Yom HaShoah to reflect on the horrific events that occurred
 during those dark years and to educate others and work to create a
 more peaceful world; and
 WHEREAS, At one time, El Paso was home to more than 80 people
 who had survived the suffering of the Holocaust; although many have
 since died, the residents who remain are among the city's most
 treasured citizens; and
 WHEREAS, These include: Tom Dula, a native of Czechoslovakia
 who was helped by non-Jewish farmers; Guy Hauptman, a native of
 Belgium who was sheltered by friends, family, and a Christian
 orphanage before being reunited with his parents after the war; Mr.
 Hauptman's mother, Sara Rozen Hauptman, a native of Poland and a
 survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau and Dachau; David Kaplan, a native
 of Lithuania who worked in Nazi factories and survived two
 concentration camps and two death marches; and El Paso Holocaust
 Museum and Study Center founder Henry Kellen, a native of Poland who
 escaped the Kovno Ghetto in Lithuania, along with his wife and
 nephew, and was hidden by a Christian farmer; and
 WHEREAS, Additional local survivors are: Samuel Kessel, a
 native of Lithuania and a survivor of the Stutthof and Dachau
 concentration camps; Irene Osborne, a native of Germany who
 survived two concentration camps and later lived with family in
 France under a false identity; Albert Rosenberg, a native of
 Germany who survived a severe beating before immigrating to the
 United States and serving in the military's psychological warfare
 division; Erik Saks, a native of Austria who escaped with his family
 to Italy and eventually to the United States, where he enlisted in
 the army; Charlie Saul, who traveled with his family from Burma,
 where his father worked, to Calcutta, India, after Japan invaded
 Burma; Tibor Schaechner, a native of Hungary who hid with his mother
 and sister in safe houses before being forced into the Budapest
 Ghetto; Peter Shugart, also a native of Hungary who survived the
 Budapest Ghetto; and Lee Schweitzer, a native of Austria who moved
 to Palestine to live with relatives and then immigrated to the
 United States, where he was drafted into the army; and
 WHEREAS, Through their courage to come forward and share
 their painful past, these remarkable men and women make El Paso a
 better place in which to live, and their stories serve as powerful
 reminders to stand firm against all forms of injustice; now,
 therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 82nd Texas
 Legislature hereby commemorate the 2011 El Paso Holocaust Museum
 and Study Center Yom HaShoah and extend sincere gratitude to all
 those associated with the event for their efforts to educate others
 about the Holocaust.