New York Daily News

SURVIVAL & DEATH

Killed by virus after living thru Holocaust

- BY CHELSIA ROSE MARCIUS

Holocaust survivor Michael Baran knew he was nearing the end of his life last year as coronaviru­s swept through New York City.

Baran — a 97-year-old Yiddish teacher from Poland whose father, siblings and other family members were murdered by the Nazis during World War II — was suffering from kidney failure late last March. He feared catching COVID-19 while undergoing long, painful days of dialysis in Woodside, Queens.

For Baran, who married his wife, Millie, just as the war was coming to an end, the only place to die was at home with the woman he had loved for 75 years — the one person who knew their native town of Oshmiany before the invasion, before the death camps and before their lives had been stolen.

“He died the way he really wanted to die — with my mom,” his daughter Ruth Baran-Gerold told the Daily News, recalling how her parents lay in their bed in Forest Hills on the night of April 17, 2020, sharing a few final moments of laughter before her father fell silent in her mother’s arms.

“Throughout his life, his love for my mom is what meant the most,” the daughter said. “They were on their own, relying on their own power, their own abilities, the kindness of some strangers, and on one another to make it.”

Baran is one of 15 survivors who died during the pandemic, or in the few months before coronaviru­s hit New York, who will be honored by the Museum of Jewish Heritage in lower Manhattan for Holocaust Remembranc­e Day on April 8.

“For us, this day really underscore­s never forget, and never again,” said the museum’s president and CEO, Jack Kliger, noting that survivors’ obituaries and testimonia­ls will be featured on the museum website in a moving tribute to their legacies.

“These were people who were teenagers during the war,” he said. “Most of them had tremendous hope for the future, they had hope for their future generation­s, and they [had] hope mankind can be better.”

Boris and Beyla Solovyov, a couple who settled in Cleveland after fleeing the war following the 1941 German invasion of Russia, will also be honored.

Beyla, who was taken with her family to the ghetto in Bershad, Ukraine, where she witnessed hangings and suffered beatings at the hands of the Nazis, died of natural causes at 10:30 a.m. on Oct. 10, 2019. She was 83 and had suffered failing health after falling and breaking her hip.

“[My father] kept on saying to her, ‘My love, please wake up, why aren’t you talking to me?’ “their daughter Marina Abramovitz of Merrick, L.I., said of Boris, who suffered from debilitati­ng dementia.

“He couldn’t understand what was going on, that she was gone. But he knew that he loved her, and I knew that was it for him.”

Boris, 84, survived the war in Odessa, Ukraine, where tens of thousands of Jews were massacred. That was the same city where he would later meet his wife, when he saved her from drowning in Ukraine’s Dead Sea. Boris died from coronaviru­s at 10:30 a.m. on April 10, 2020, exactly six months after Beyla’s death.

“They were very protective of one another,” Abramovitz said. “They really loved each other, more than anything.”

For Baran — who taught Jewish history, language and literature, and served as director of Camp Hemshekh in the Catskills — the story of the day he and his wife pulled into New York Harbor in May 1949 after a two-week voyage from their homeland is one he’d often share with the children of survivors.

“My father used to tell the kids that when they saw the Statue of Liberty, they all put on their best clothes,” said Baran-Gerold. “He said it was the best day of his life, because it was the symbol of freedom that they hadn’t had in so many years.

“We view the Holocaust not just as a genocide, but as an assassinat­ion of a way of life. He viewed [his teachings] as such an awesome responsibi­lity, that he could say, ‘This is what happened to us, this is what we survived, this is what you must remember.’ ”

As Gov. Cuomo faces growing calls to resign, Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone is taking steps toward a possible gubernator­ial run.

In recent days, Bellone has been speaking with “some of the top national consultant­s,” along with “big-time donors,” said a source close to the Democratic politician.

“Steve is seriously considerin­g jumping in to make his run for governor,” the source said, adding that the idea has “always been out there, and now there’s a real opening.”

Cuomo’s term in Albany ends in 2022. But even as calls grow for him to leave office amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct, including from both U.S. senators for New York, the incumbent has indicated he’s not going down without a fight.

Bellone is being very proactive, a source said. “The fund-raising has picked up quite a bit because the calls are starting to come in from all across the state.” With Cuomo facing “a crisis of public trust,” Bellone can point to his leadership in the Hurricane Sandy response and to his battles against local corruption, the source said.

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 ??  ?? Lower Manhattan’s Museum of Jewish Heritage will mark Holocaust Remembranc­e Day on April 8 by honoring survivors who died shortly before or during pandemic, including Michael Baran of Queens (inset far l.) and Boris and Beyla Solovyov of Cleveland (below).
Lower Manhattan’s Museum of Jewish Heritage will mark Holocaust Remembranc­e Day on April 8 by honoring survivors who died shortly before or during pandemic, including Michael Baran of Queens (inset far l.) and Boris and Beyla Solovyov of Cleveland (below).

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