For many audience members, hearing a Holocaust survivor’s story for the first time resulted in painful tears, full-body trembles and uncomfortable cringes at revolting mental images.
For Holocaust survivor Walter Kase, reliving the story almost seven decades later incites no milder of a response.
“This is probably the 1,200th time I have told this story, and I cry every single time,” Kase said. “I still can’t see how human beings could do these things to other humans.”
Kase shared the horrors of living as a Jew in Nazi-controlled Poland during World War II at the Texas Union on Tuesday afternoon. The event was hosted by the Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies. Allegra Azulay, outreach coordinator for the center, said the event was held to educate UT students about the tragedy from a first-hand perspective while it is still possible.
“It’s important to know the actual facts about these things that happened, which seem like so long ago, so that people understand the horror of the experiences and how anti-Semitism impacted society at that time,” Azulay said. “The results are still affecting people today.”
Kase chronicled his journey, starting as an 11-year-old boy wearing a Star of David, to being sent to from hard-labor camp to hard-labor camp, to being separated from his mother, to watching his eight-year-old sister shot by the soldiers because she was too young for labor.
Kase said starvation was the biggest enemy, and his biggest break came when the Nazi soldiers assigned him to be a potato-peeler, a job he said is the equivalent of being Colt McCoy for a day. He said the Nazis would pat him down after kitchen duties, but he would sneak food to his father by taking potato peels, squeezing them together and smearing the paste on to the inside of his clothing.
“I knew that if I got caught with any trace of food, they would take me outside and shoot me,” he said. “But I also knew that my father was going to die without the food.”
Kase and his father survived the brutal conditions of the labor camp until American soldiers found them in May 1945. He came to the United States through an American relief agency program.
Kase said he did not begin speaking to large audiences until recently and that he hopes to serve as a symbol for the atrocities that can originate from simple prejudice and hatred.
He said he is disappointed with the steps the world has taken to avoid such catastrophes.
“Race, religion and culture are three gifts that God gave us to enrich the population, and people use them to create mayhem,” he said. “I don’t see much improvement on what is happening today.”
David, an electrical engineering freshman who didn’t want his last name printed, said he attended out of curiosity and interest, and took away much more than he expected.
“It serves as a reminder of who we are and what we should do,” he said. “I didn’t expect it to be so strong and emotional, but I guess it has to be strong and emotional if you want to prevent history from repeating itself.”





