Name at birth
Masha Wolpe
Date of birth
11/20/1923
Where were you born?
Where did you grow up?
Kovno, Lithiuania
Name of father, occupation
Businessman
Immediate family (names, birth order)
Parents, one brother, one sister and Masha
How many in entire extended family?
Aunts and uncles from mother's and father's side of family, large extended family, no one survived.
Who survived the Holocaust?
Masha was the only survivor from her family
Baras was born to a very wealthy family in Kovno, Lithuania. Her father was involved in community organizations and founded the school she attended. The family had maids, a cook, a vacation villa at the ocean, and a chauffeured car. When Russia invaded Lithuania in 1940, she recalls, everything was suddenly lost.

The Germans then entered Kovno in 1941 and the family was forced into the Kovno ghetto. All five members of Baras’s family lived in one room. Each day Baras went out of the ghetto with the work crew, hid her yellow star, and searched for food. Because of her appearance (she was very tall, blonde, with non-Jewish features), she was able to supply her family with food in the ghetto. Her father was member of the Kovno Judenrat.

In June 1944 Baras, her mother, and her sister were sent in cattle cars to Stutthoff in Poland. She later learned that her father and brother went to Dachau, where both perished. In Stutthoff, Baras endured cruel treatment and vividly remembers the daily roll calls during which one waited to be chosen for death. When typhus struck the camp, Baras’s mother died, but Baras and her sister survived the outbreak.

In April 1945 the Russians were approaching Stutthoff and the Germans began to retreat. She and her sister were among those put on a boat to retreat to Germany. As the Allies neared the boat, the Germans pushed all the prisoners into the water. Baras’s sister drowned, and she only remembers awakening on the beach, one of the only survivors. The British found her and sent her to a hospital. She weighed 89 pounds.

Baras eventually walked from Poland to Italy, where she remained for five years until she was allowed to join an uncle in the United States. She is the only survivor of her family.
Where did you go after being liberated?
Masha walked from Poland to Italy where she lived for five years waiting for entrance to the United States
Where did you settle?
Washington DC, moved to Detroit in 1980
How is it that you came to Michigan?
Masha had an uncle in Washington DC who she lived with when she came to the United States
Occupation after the war
Hebrew teacher
Spouse
Joseph Baras
Children
Daughter Sheila Cohen
Grandchildren
Jackie, David, Jonathan; great-grandchildren Eli, Gabriella, Jordan, Arielle
Interviewer:
Zekelman Holocaust Center, Esther Weine
Interview date:
04/25/1988
To learn more about this survivor, please visit:

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