[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 111 (Tuesday, July 24, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H5134-H5135]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO KATHLEEN ``KATHI'' WILKES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, these are tasks that we often
do not find welcoming. I rise this morning to pay tribute to a public
servant among us, someone who served in this House as a staff person, a
chief of staff in my office. I rise this morning to pay tribute to
Kathleen ``Kathi'' Wilkes, whose memorial service will be held this
afternoon, July 24, 1:30 p.m., at the Alfred Street Baptist Church in
Alexandria, Virginia.
Kathi died suddenly last Saturday. The good news is that so many of
her friends were able to fly in, as I was able to do from Houston, and
to be with her in those waning hours. One can always ask the question
why, and there is no explanation for someone so full of life, so ready
to serve, so willing to help, to lose their life so suddenly, even as
she was so active the week of her death.
Kathi had a wonderful history of coming from Ohio, touching down in
Pennsylvania, in Houston, and Washington, D.C. How often can what we
call a ``civilian'' touch the lives of so many States and so many
people? Kathi pulled herself up by her bootstraps, supported herself,
and became a nurse. As she was so good at nursing as well, she
continued to nurture people, maybe in the spirit of Florence
Nightingale.
That was not enough for Kathi. She continued to put herself through
school and ultimately graduated and became a lawyer. That brought her
to Houston, Texas, working for one of the major
[[Page H5135]]
corporations there, but it brought her into my life so many years ago.
There, she was a light as well, interested in helping and befriending
not only my husband and myself, but my two little ones, Erica and
Jason. Boy, did they have a buddy in Kathi Wilkes. She loved to do
things that children much smaller and much younger than herself
enjoyed. She was just a fun-loving person. Then, of course, she
traveled to places around the world embracing friends.
As she came back to Washington, D.C., to become the chief of staff in
the 18th Congressional District, what a light she was in the office,
bringing in great talent and other young people who were nurtured,
counseled by her, tutored, and made great. Then, of course, what a
partner in legislation. She was there through the ups and downs of the
1990s, through the impeachment proceedings, as I was a member of the
House Judiciary Committee. Through all these tough times, Kathi was
there.
Then we were able to do something quite great, if I might say so
myself. This House was built by slaves, the Capitol of the United
States of America. But as we looked around a few years past, there were
no statues of African Americans, less an African American woman. I
passed legislation, along with then-Senator Clinton, to place a statue
of Sojourner Truth in this House. Sojourner Truth was a person who had
been an abolitionist, a suffragette, a slave, a mother of 13 children,
who had seen most all of them sold into slavery.
Kathi worked without ceasing to ensure that that statue was sculpted,
that we had the opportunity to place it historically in the United
States Congress, and it was honored with 2,000 people coming to see the
placement of the Sojourner Truth statue having then-Secretary Hillary
Clinton and First Lady Michelle Obama and, of course, the Speaker,
Nancy Pelosi, present. What a wonderful day and occasion and tribute to
the hard work of Kathi Wilkes.
It is befitting that I rise today to express the deep pain that so
many of us feel, friends from all around the world even, but certainly
in this Nation. Friends, as I said from Ohio, to Pennsylvania, to
Washington, D.C., to Texas, many of whom will be able to come today,
others of whom will celebrate her in Houston and in Ohio. One may ask
why she is deserving of such. In the backdrop of such terrible
tragedies that have faced us in Aurora and places around the world, as
we mourn the loss of so many in the occurrence of last Thursday, I
stand here today to say that I know that if Kathi Wilkes were alive
today, she would be somewhere trying to help, to nurture, to assist my
office, to be of help, even as she is no longer a chief of staff, but
really a former chief of staff.
That is simply the way Kathi Wilkes is to her mother, her son, and,
of course, her granddaughter and her many relatives and many friends.
We have lost a good friend, but I can see her now taking wings.
Farewell, my good friend. You have served well and made us proud.
More importantly, you have given of yourself. May you rest in peace.
____________________