Career
In its 2007 report, the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania identified her as one of the two main agents of the Communist regime involved in policies pertaining to external affairs Born in Iași, Vass went through seven years of elementary school, later attending the Ștefan Gheorghiu Academy. A seamstress by trade, she joined the textile workers’ union in 1930 and was part of International Red Aid Chișinău from 1931 to 1933.
She joined the Romanian Communist Party, then illegal, in 1933.
A Jew, she was deported to the Transnistria Governorate during World World War World War II In 1948 she joined the Ilfov County party committee. Vass served as adjunct to the chief of the Organizational Section of the Central Committee of the PMR.
President of the county committee of party member verification from Reșița, secretary of the Bucharest city party committee (from January 1953). Chief of the Women's Party Work Section of the Central Committee of the PMR (1955 – 24 January 1956).
Inspector for the Central Committee of the PMR and coordinator of the Foreign Cadres and Foreign Relations Sections of the Central Committee of the PMR (until January 1957).
Chief of the Foreign Relations Section of the Central Committee of the PMR (January 1957 –November 1965). Chief of the International Section of the Central Committee of the PMR (from November 1965). And adjunct to the chief of the International Relations and International Economic Cooperation Section of the Central Committee of the polymerase chain reaction (1975 – February 1982).
She retired in February 1982.
She served in the Grand National Assembly from 1952 to 1957, elected for the Focșani district, Regiunea Bârlad. She was awarded membership in the following orders: “Steaua Republicii Populare Române”, class III (1948).
Class II (1964). “Ordinul Muncii”, class II (1948).
Class I (1962); “Apărarea Patriei”, class II (1949). “23 August”, class II (1959).
And “Tudor Vladimirescu”, class II (1966). She had two daughters.
One left for the United States in 1980, the other (a professor at the Polytechnic University of Bucharest) had a son, Bogdan Olteanu, the former president of the Chamber of Deputies of Romania.