Shirley
Berman on vacation in the Florida Keys in 1996. (Courtesy of Ottawa Jewish
Archives)
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Shirley
Berman, founder of the Ottawa Jewish Archives, died at home in Ottawa on
September 2, at age 89, following a courageous battle with cancer. Two of her
successors at the Archives, current archivist Zoe Thrumston and retired archivist Dawn Logan, remember Shirley and the impact she and her work had on
them and on the community.
Zoe Thrumston writes…
This past summer, an acquisitions officer from the Yad Vashem Archives
in Jerusalem made a visit to the Ottawa Jewish Archives. She was on a
cross-Canada tour, in search of material related to the Holocaust, including
scheduled stops in Toronto, Montreal, and at our own Archives here in Ottawa.
While she knew she would find some material of interest, she was blown away by
the scope of our small institution. For an archives as small as ours, she was
impressed by how well organized our vault was, by our metadata, by our online
database, by our digitized photographs, and by how smoothly the archives ran.
While I was of course happy to receive the compliments, the credit
really goes to our founding archivist, Shirley Berman.
As the current
archivist for the Ottawa Jewish Archives, I cannot say enough about what a
force Shirley was. Twenty years after she retired, Shirley routinely stopped in
to offer advice and check on how things were running. Her appreciation for
history, and the importance of community memory, was an inspiration.
Shirley was born
in Toronto in 1930, the daughter of Baruch (Benjamin) and Helena (Freedman)
Hettler. Shirley and Shier Berman met in Toronto through their shared Zionist
youth interests. They married on May 24, 1951 in Toronto and shortly afterwards
spent a year in New York to lead a Zionist youth movement called Dror Habonim.
They returned to Toronto in 1953 when Shier began his post-graduate work at
University of Toronto.
Shirley arrived in
Ottawa in 1957, with her husband, when Shier began work at the National
Research Council.
While Shirley was
not a degree holding archivist, she took archival training courses at Carleton
University and the National Archives of Canada. She became executive secretary
of the Ottawa Jewish Historical Society in 1972 and held that position until
1998. Simultaneously, Shirley began collecting the history of the Ottawa Jewish
Community and by the late 1970s, founded the Ottawa Jewish Archives.
Shirley’s
foresight for the importance of memory keeping was unique. She saw firsthand
what our community needed, and took the correct steps toward making it happen.
Shirley will be remembered throughout the community for her efforts in creating
and moving forward the community’s archives. Today, any researcher can comb
through the archives’ holdings and recognize Shirley’s unique and dedicated
voice.
Shirley is
survived by her husband Shier, their three children, Reva, Eli and David, and
four grandchildren.
Dawn Logan writes…
Last March,
Shirley Berman hosted a luncheon for some of the former Ottawa Jewish Archives
archivists including myself, Laurie Dougherty and Marcia Mordfield. It was a
most enjoyable occasion and although we do not see each other often, there
never was a lull in the conversation as we learned about our various archival
interests since leaving 21 Nadolny Sachs Private.
None of us will
forget that event and now we are thinking of Shirley, how we met and her many
accomplishments.
Shirley and I met
through a public relations project for Those Pesky Weeds, the diary of
Harold Rubin. A team of soon-to-be graduates of an archives technology course
at Algonquin College took up Shirley’s request for posters to be used in
promoting the book. Shirley oversaw all aspects of the book’s production and
reached out to this new archival course for assistance. It showed how she was
forever observant to new possibilities that would create interest in Ottawa
Jewish history.
Shirley understood the need for archival publicity and early in her
career, curated an important exhibition at the National Archives entitled
“Journey into our Heritage.” Lowertown tours and reunions were engineered by
Shirley and based around the York Street School, which so many Jewish children
had attended. Shirley was a founding member of the Ottawa Jewish Historical
Society and for many years she maintained a seamless thread of management
between the society and the Archives.
The major vehicle
for preserving Ottawa’s Jewish history was establishing the Archives at the
Jewish Community Centre on Chapel Street. It featured a temperature controlled
vault and a bright workroom for researchers and staff. It was there that all
the early editions of the Ottawa Jewish Bulletin and the Ottawa Jewish
Telephone Directory were compiled, and the minutes from meetings of the Jewish
Community Council of Ottawa/Vaad Ha’ir from its inception were saved. Early
synagogue records were also accumulated. Shirley understood the importance of
these early building blocks. She worked closely with Hugo Levendel, who
deposited his invaluable collection of ByWard Market photographs from the
1930s. She also made certain that groups such as the Labour Zionist Council of
Ottawa and Dror Habonim were properly represented in the Archives.
Shirley also maintained an interest in Jewish artifacts – including the
Murray Street Synagogue murals which she, along with art historian Reesa
Greenberg and architect Martin Weil, saved – and collected them in the Archives
with the hope of eventually starting a small museum.
When plans were
formulated for the new Soloway Jewish Community Centre in the west end, Shirley
made absolutely sure the Ottawa Jewish Archives would be part of the plan and the
move. It was a proud moment for her when the move occurred in 1999 into a space
within the Greenberg Families Library which includes a large vault, a workroom
and an office.
With this major
move, Shirley stepped back from day to day archival work and Marcia Mordfield
and I became the archivists.
As Marcia
recalled, “I don’t ever remember Shirley coming into the Archives to tell us we
were not doing things the way she had previously done them. Instead, she
embraced the change and was our biggest supporter. She was a mentor of Dawn and
Dawn became a mentor to me. I like to think that I mentor archival
professionals and therefore Shirley’s teachings are passed on. I will miss her
kindness, warmth and smile. She is, and always will be, the reason the Ottawa Jewish
community has a preserved history.”
Laurie Dougherty followed me as archivist. She described Shirley as a
“widely known and respected person for her pioneering efforts in Ontario’s
small archival community in the 1980s. She was a dedicated advocate for the
Ottawa Jewish Historical Society and the Ottawa Jewish Archives for many years
after her retirement.”
Laurie confided
that she “learned a lot about being a community archivist from Shirley. To her,
it wasn’t just about collecting the records – it was about documenting the
lives of the people in the community. I looked forward to her occasional visits
to the Ottawa Jewish Archives and feel privileged to have known her.”
Laurie added that one of Shirley’s major achievements was the series of
oral history interviews she conducted in the late 1970s, some of which were in
Yiddish. “She knew that by capturing the actual voices of members of the
community, she was preserving more than just stories for the next generation.”
“Shirley Berman’s
name was legion in the history of the Ottawa Jewish Archives,” said Janice
Rosen, archivist of the Alex Dworkin Canadian Jewish Archives in Montreal. In
the 1970s, archives were not more than a few piles of documents sitting in a
corner. By the ‘80s, the new buzz words were ‘sorting’ and ‘classification’ and
Shirley was in the thick of this.”
When Shirley
stepped back from the day to day operations of the Ottawa Jewish Archives in
1999, she had time to pursue other historical interests. At the top of her list
was detailing the life of legendary community leader Lillian Bilsky Freiman.
She reviewed all aspects of Freiman’s life and her thoroughly researched entry
is now part of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography, v. XVI. This past
May 23, Shirley attended the first lecture in the Ottawa Jewish Historical
Society’s Shirley Berman Lecture Series and took great delight that the lecture
was entitled “Lillian Bilsky Freiman: A life of Giving.”
Shirley’s very
last project was the editing, along with Judith Weinman, and publishing of
Shirley Steinberg’s book, Men Darf Lakhn: A Collection of Yiddish Skits,
Plays and Monologues.
We are the richer for
knowing Shirley Berman and her life of giving and the Ottawa Jewish community
is richer for her archival foresight, perseverance and dedication in preserving
its history.
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