Friday, January 30, 2015

Remembering Ilias and Frank


Remembering Ilias and Frank

Thirteen years ago today, in just a couple hours, my father slipped away, peacefully at home.  The sun was shining on a clear, crisp winter afternoon, snow on the ground, the blue jays screamed, harolding his passing, mother was on the phone with Aunt Mary Jane, Tim and I were out coffin shopping (aside on this to follow), Chaunce was at work.  My father hadn’t been alone without his wife or one of his kids by his side for over a month.  I was in from Colorado and I slept on the floor next to his hospital bed.  We took shifts, we made 3,000 calorie Ensure shakes that he would sip and the brothers would drink… Dad chose this moment, in control up the last, to go; to go quietly without pomp or circumstance, his last exhale left his body in front of his caregiver.  Dad wasn’t much for showing weakness and he didn’t like being sick, he wasn’t going to die in front of his wife and kids, so he chose this quiet moment and he left.

A couple weeks ago we celebrated the life of Dr. Ilias Karas.  The passing of another pillar of positive patriarchy surfaced all of the feelings I had when my Dad was dying; the moment I found out he was dead.  Tim and I had stopped for a quick bite to eat at Joe Daniels, Mom called, “he’s gone”.  We stood up, left our order and sped home.  We were home within ten minutes of his passing, but it felt like he had been gone longer, the world felt different, like Nick Karas said, part of me was ripped out and taken from here to beyond. There was an emptiness that I felt inside me, I saw his body, still warm, but Dad was clearly not there.

I felt so privileged to be a part of the weekend of remembrance with the Karas/Dennehy Clan, eating, laughing, drinking, singing… his children eulogized him each in their brilliant authentic way, his children and grandchildren, wife, family and friends the true testament to an incredible man, the legacy of Dr. Ilias Karas lives on.  I was one of the neighborhood kids who saw Dr. Karas, not for tonsils, but for sinus surgery.  Dr. K. once saved the life of a colleague of my father who had throat cancer.  Slight in stature, big in skill, intelligence, welcome and persona.

A long-time family friend, Dr. MacEntee, eulogized him as well; the two men could not be more different in some ways, one from Greece, the other from Ireland, one “agnostic” the other Irish Catholic, but both committed to healing and serving others. Dr. MacEntee said Ilias could keep a joke going for years.  Dr. MacEntee was with Dr. K in the final hours and he reasoned with him to essentially hedge his bets, “what if you’re wrong Ilie”, few could communicate with Dr. Karas at this point as communication was very difficult, but still Ilias responded, “It would be dishonest.” 

In addition to being one of the legendary father figures and professional figures during my youth, later in my life Dr. Karas became my hero from a far for having the courage to question, to openly admit agnosticism in a society that boasts separation of church and state, but for all practical purposes, demands conformity in faith and many other things.  Both men died in the bleak midwinter, Ilias died at 79, Dad at 80. Rest in peace Ilias, rest in peace Frank.  Different men, strong men, fathers who left a legacy no matter what does or does not come next. 



To read about my father go to 2010 at right.  Tuesday, January 26, 2010, Remembering Frank E. Cassidy.



http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/292171/dr-ilias-karas-survived-wwii-deprivation-greece-find-success-america

Dr. Ilias Karas, who survived WWII deprivation in Greece to find success in U.S., dies at 79

Posted: 01/15/2015, 05:31pm | Maureen O'Donnell

Dr. Ilias Karas liked simple food and complex debates.

He loved an unadorned Mediterranean feast, dipping bread in homemade yogurt and snacking on figs and oil-cured olives. He enjoyed spirited discussions of politics and history, something friends and relatives attribute to his having grown up in Athens, which gave the world democracy and the philosopher Socrates, who used questions to get to the big answers.

Dr. Karas, 79, died Dec. 9 of kidney disease at his retirement home in Naples, Florida.

Outgoing, irreverent and funny, he was the kind of man who’d roast a lamb on a spit and invite the entire neighborhood over to enjoy it.

Though he visited Ireland every year with Marie, his County Kerry-born wife of 49 years, he found fecund joke fodder in Ireland’s rainy weather and spotty central heating. Once, when his Irish brother-in-law urged him to come in the house, Dr. Karas replied, “No, I’m warmer standing outside than I am inside.”

He loved spending time at his condo in Acapulco, staring at the waves and luxuriating in the warmth, which reminded him of Greece.

Dr. Karas liked studying the markets and monitoring his investments. He read the Wall Street Journal from cover to cover, and he wouldn’t make plans on Friday nights when “Wall Street Week” was on TV. He bought farmland in Lemont and later sold it for development. The chair of otolaryngology at Advocate Christ Medical Center, he was the picture of a successful physician.

But Dr. Karas never forgot the deprivation he experienced as a Greek child in World War II.

“I’d say, ‘Dad, c’mon, enjoy yourself, why are you so frugal?’ ’’ recalled his son, Nick Karas. “He said, ‘I feel like at any moment, it could possibly be taken away.’ ”

He survived the Axis occupation of Greece, when German, Italian and Bulgarian forces carved up the country and starvation ruled in his hometown of Athens. An estimated 300,000 Greeks died.

“He saw people starve to death on the streets that didn’t have family,” his son said. “They literally were provided with no food, and you banded together with family and close friends, and if you didn’t have that, you literally starved to death.”

What may have helped the Karas family survive was that his butcher father had contacts in the meat business. But their diet consisted almost exclusively of bread, yogurt and water, his son said. On a good day, they had olives.

What little food there was went first to the Germans rolling by in tanks, or quislings who cared more for full bellies and political advancement than national pride.

The young Ilias Karas also spent two and a half years in the hospital after contracting polio, which left him with a limp. But he continued his studies and was double-promoted. He went on to medical school, and once he emerged from the University of Athens, his parents “thought the best would be for him to go to the United States,” his son said.

In 1963, he came to Chicago because of ties to Greek churches here, his son said. He shortened his surname, from Karagiannopoulos to Karas. He used to say, “People talked about how they immigrated to this country with $1, $5, $10 to their name — I came here with negative $300 because I owed a friend in Athens for my airplane ticket over.”

As a young resident at Edgewater Hospital, Dr. Karas’ resources were so limited he didn’t have the money to return to Greece for his father’s funeral when he was hit by a car in Athens that same year.

Though he came to America on a medical student visa, a brief window — perhaps a month long — allowed medical students like him to apply to stay on, his son said. Dr. Karas filled out the papers. A friend, who missed the deadline, had to return to Greece. “My dad always told me, take advantage of everything you can, because it might not be here tomorrow,” his son said. “He thought it was the best country in the world.”

He and a nurse, Marie Dennehy, fell in love. They married and took off a month each summer to bring their four children to visit relatives in Ireland and Greece. Mr. Karas was the only one of his five siblings to immigrate. His wife had five brothers and sisters in Ireland. The trips were glorious for their children, who played with an estimated 60 Greek and Irish first cousins.

Eventually, he became head of ear, nose and throat medicine at Advocate Christ Medical Center. “He was wonderful with patients, tremendously popular; very gentle,” said a friend, Dr. Peter MacEntee. As teens, his children became used to hearing from friends, “Your dad took my tonsils out.”

The Karases raised their family in Palos Heights and Palos Park. He taught his wife how to make yogurt and how to season fish the Greek way, with lemon and oregano. He told his children how the Greek hero and military genius Alexander the Great conquered much of the known world by age 25.

Often, Dr. Karas worked till 9 p.m. He and his wife recharged by taking their family to Acapulco for Christmas each year. He also enjoyed trips to Africa, Australia, India, and going on cruises.

In addition to his wife and son, Dr. Karas is survived by his daughters, Katherine Karas Murphy, Marilynn Karas Borock and Jennifer Karas Maconochie; sisters, Ritsa Anagnostou and Stella Karagiannopoulos; a brother, Marios, and 13 grandchildren. A mnimosino, a Greek memorial service 40 days after death, is planned. A wake will be held from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday at Hills Funeral Home, 10201 S. Roberts Rd., Palos Hills. A memorial luncheon is scheduled at noon Sunday at Palos Country Club in Orland Park. His family plans to spread his ashes in Acapulco.