H.R. No. 1691 R E S O L U T I O N WHEREAS, A life defined by extraordinary strength and resilience drew to a close with the death of Walter Kase of Houston on March 4, 2015, at the age of 85; and WHEREAS, Walter Kase was born Wladyslaw Kasrylewicz on August 17, 1929, in Lodz, Poland, where his parents, Chaim and Evalina, owned a dyeing factory and a commercial laundry; he grew up in a happy and loving household enriched by music, shared meals, and the celebration of the family's Jewish faith; and WHEREAS, This idyllic boyhood was shattered in 1939, when Germany invaded Poland; Mr. Kase's family lost their home and all their possessions and were forced to live in the ghettos of Lodz and Kielce; as the Nazis began their program of extermination, Mr. Kase witnessed the murder of his little sister, Rysia, and he and his parents were shipped in a packed freight car to the concentration camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau; and WHEREAS, Mr. Kase's mother was sent to another camp, and he and his father kept each other alive throughout the war, first at Auschwitz, then in the camps at Pionki, Sosnowiec, Dachau, Bergen-Belsen, Mauthausen, and Gunskirchen, where they were finally liberated by the United States Army on May 5, 1945; Mr. Kase's father died of malnutrition shortly after the war, and, all told, 70 members of his family were lost in the Holocaust; only Mr. Kase, his mother, and a cousin in Sweden survived; and WHEREAS, In 1947, Mr. Kase was one of 400 young Holocaust survivors selected by the U.S. Children's Committee to begin a new life in America, and he settled in Kansas City, Missouri; equipped with a Polish-English dictionary, he taught himself the language and worked through high school and junior college together in just two years, ultimately landing a sales job with a wholesale costume jewelry company; he also met an American girl at the Jewish Community Center, and at the age of 20, he married Lila Greenstein; around the same time, he was able to bring his mother to the United States; and WHEREAS, After serving proudly in the U.S. Army in Germany, Mr. Kase moved to Houston with his wife, where they were blessed with two children, Risha, who was named for his late sister, and Kenneth; Mr. Kase resumed his career, expanding the company's territory into Texas and Louisiana and becoming one of its most successful sales representatives; he also became a silent partner in an import company and eventually left his sales job to help run the business full-time; he shared the last four decades of his life with his second wife, Sylvia Christine Oshman; and WHEREAS, After Mr. Kase retired in 1990, he devoted much of the next 25 years to speaking to high school audiences about his experiences during the Holocaust, and he shared with thousands of students his hard-won wisdom about the effects of bigotry and prejudice; his efforts earned him the St. Augustine Award from St. Thomas University, the Houston Civil Rights Hero Award from the Anti-Defamation League, a lifelong honorary membership from the national commission of the ADL, and the State of Texas Governor's Award for Volunteers, among many others; the ADL's annual Walter Kase Teacher Excellence Award and the Walter Kase Commons at Hamilton Middle School were named in his honor, and in 2011, he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Houston for his support of its graduate college of social work; he also served on the board of the Houston Holocaust Museum; and WHEREAS, Over the course of a remarkable life, Walter Kase endured some of the worst cruelties that people can inflict on one another, and yet he survived to become a loving father and husband, a successful businessman, and a champion for freedom, tolerance, and human dignity; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 84th Texas Legislature hereby pay tribute to the memory of Walter Kase and extend sincere condolences to the members of his family: to his wife, Sylvia Christine Kase; to his daughter, Risha Dozark, and her husband, Patrick; to his son, Kenneth Kase, and his wife, Linda; to his grandson, Daniel Dozark; to his stepdaughter, Heidi Massin, and her husband, David; to his granddaughter, Kaitlyn Massin; to his stepson, Randy Oshman; to his cousins, Sara Mankowitz and her husband, Lennart, and Jonny Belchatowski; and to his many friends; and, be it further RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for his family and that when the Texas House of Representatives adjourns this day, it do so in memory of Walter Kase. Davis of Harris ______________________________ Speaker of the House I certify that H.R. No. 1691 was unanimously adopted by a rising vote of the House on April 23, 2015. ______________________________ Chief Clerk of the House