Guide to the Marga Silbermann Randall Photographs c. 1914-1995

Repository
Heinz History Center
Title
Marga Silbermann Randall Photographs,
Creator
Randall, Marga Silbermann, 1930-2005
Collection Number
MSP 543
Extent
0.25 linear feet (1 box)
Date
c. 1914-1995
Abstract
Born in Lemforde, Germany, on March 20, 1930, Marga Silbermann Randall and her family experienced Nazi persecution before fleeing to the United States and settling in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Some members of her immeadate family surivied the war and were reunited, but most of her extended family perished. Marga Silbermann Randall married, had a family, and was active in the Jewish community, including as the president of Women's American Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT) in the 1960s. In 1981, she returned to Germany to begin to piece together her family's history and confront her own memories. She spent the rest of her life teaching and lecturing about her personal experiences in the Holocaust both locally and abroad.
Language
The material in this collection is in English.
Author
The guide to this collection was written by Theresa E. Rea with generous support from the PNC Charitable Trusts- J. Samuel and Rose Y. Cox Foundation and the Giant Eagle Foundation.
Publisher
Heinz History Center
Address
1212 Smallman St.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222
library@heinzhistorycenter.org
URL: https://www.heinzhistorycenter.org

History

The youngest of four children, Marga Silbermann Randall was born to Louis and Johanna (Hannah) Silbermann in Lemforde, Germany, on March 20, 1930. The sudden death of her father fractured the family, and her mother and siblings went in separate directions to support themselves. After moving into a small apartment, her mother was employed as a housekeeper. Her brothers Manfred and Herbert, and her sister Hilda went to acquire trade skills for employment. Marga Silbermann was sent to Schermbeck, Germany to live with her maternal grandparents Gustav and Emma Adelsheimer and her aunt, Paula.

Soon after Kristallnacht in November 1938, the family laid plans to flee Schermbeck for Berlin. After two and a half years of waiting for exit visas in Berlin, Marga Silbermann. her sister Hilda, and her mother boarded a ship that would bring them to the United States in 1941. Upon arrival, they moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where Marga Silbermann's aunt Bertha Adelsheimer Kann and her husband Nathan Kann lived, having immigrated a few years before.

After her arrival in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Marga Silbermann went to Colfax School, located in Squirrel Hill. She learned the English language and eventually received United States citizenship. She also was a member of Rodef Shalom Congregation. After graduating high school, she worked in sales, married Jordan Randall, and had a family consisting of three children.

Marga Silbermann Randall was active in the Jewish community in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, serving as the South Hills Chapter Evening president of Women;s American Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT) during the 1960s. She supported Action Reconciliation Peace Services, an organization that sends young Germans to provide Holocaust education and care for survivors worldwide, and was also involved in the Pittsburgh Holocaust Center.

In 1981, forty-one years after fleeing, Marga Silbermann Randall decided to travel back to Schermbeck and confront her past. After an initial visit, she returned to both Schermbeck and the town of her birth, Lemforde, Germany, multiple times. After 1981, Marga Silbermann Randall devoted her life to educating people about the Holocaust. In 2004, she established a Holocaust Memorial Garden at her synagogue, Temple Emanuel in Mt. Lebanon, with the soil she brought back from the ash pits at Auschwitz-Birkeneau concentration camp where her aunt Paula had died. She spent her time teaching, lecturing, and participating in Holocaust survivor programs locally and throughout the world. She made presentations at universities, public and private schools, conducted Holocaust workshops and seminars, and spoke to community organizations. She passed away on November 24, 2005 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Scope and Content Notes

The collection consists of digital reproductions and reprints of photographs depicting family gatherings, events, and portraits from approximately 1921 until 1942. Photographs of both Lemforde and Schermbeck, Germany are also in this collection. Included with the majority of the photographs are captions, explainations, and dates. Other photographs in the collection inlcude Marga Silbermann Randall's involvement in Women's American Organization for Rehabiitation through Training (ORT) in the 1960s and photographs of Dr. Hedwig O. Pregler, former principal of Colfax School.

Arrangement

  1. The photographic collection consists of one archival box with the folders arranged alphabetically.

Conditions Governing Access

No Restrictions.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Marga Silbermann Randall on November 21, 2001, January 18, 2002, March 15, 2002, May 5, 2003, October 30, 2003.

Preferred Citation

Marga Silbermann Randall Photographs, c. 1914-1995, MSP#543, Rauh Jewish Archives, Senator John Heinz History Center

Processing Information

This collection was processed by Theresa E. Rea on on November 17, 2009, with generous support from the Simon Hafner Charitable Foundation.

Conditions Governing Use

Property rights reside with the Senator John Heinz History Center. Literary rights are retained by the creators of the records and their heirs. For permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Library and Archives of the Senator John Heinz History Center.

Related Materials

An oral history by Marga Silbermann Randall relating to her Holocaust experiences is available on the USC Shoah Foundation Institute's website. (Accessed November 20, 2009).

Randall, Marga. How Beautiful We Once Were: a remembrance of the Holocaust and beyond. Pittsburgh, Pa: Cathedral Publishing, 1998; is available in the Heinz History Center library collection.

Separated Materials

The Marga Silbermann Randall Photographs have been arranged and described with the catalog designation of MSP#543.

Artifacts from Little's Shoe Store, Acc#2003.0246 donated on October 30, 2003 and the table from Germany, glove, three pieces of silver, and table covering donated on February 6, 2002 were separated from the collection and located with the museum division.

Subjects

    Corporate Names

    • Women's American Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT)
    • Colfax School

    Personal Names

    • Adelsheimer Family
    • Adelsheimer, Emma, 1865-?
    • Adelsheimer. Gustav, 1865-1943
    • Adelsheimer, Paula, 1906-1943
    • Pregler, Hedwig O., ?-1996
    • Kann, Bertha Adelsheimer, 1892-?
    • Kann, Nathan
    • Randall, Jordan
    • Randall, Marga Silbermann, 1930-2005
    • Silbermann Family
    • Silbermann, Herbert, 1920-?
    • Silbermann, Hilda, 1921-?
    • Silbermann, Johanna, 1899-?
    • Silbermann, Louis, 1888?-1934
    • Silbermann, Manfred, 1919-?

    Geographic Names

    • Pittsburgh (Pa.)
    • Schermbeck, Germany
    • Lemforde, Germany
    • Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh (Pa.)
    • Berlin, Germany

    Other Subjects

    • Jews--Pennsylvania--Pittsburgh
    • Jewish Organizations--Women--Pennsylvania--Pittsburgh
    • Education--Pennsylvania--Pittsburgh
    • Jewish--Immigrants--History
    • Holocaust survivor--Pittsburgh--Pennsylvania--Biography
    • Jewish immigration--World War II--History
    • Holocaust--Education--Pennsylvania
    • Kristallnacht--Germany--History

Container List

Family, c. 1914-1945
Containers
Box 1, Folder 1
Lemforde, Germany, c. 1930, 1990
Containers
Box 1, Folder 2
Miscellaneous, c. 1939-1944
Containers
Box 1, Folder 3
Museum Artifact-Table, n.d.
Containers
Box 1, Folder 4
Dr. Hedwig O. Pregler, c. 1984-1995, n.d.
Containers
Box 1, Folder 5
Schermbeck, Germany, c. 1934
Containers
Box 1, Folder 6
Marga Silbermann, 1930-1941
Containers
Box 1, Folder 7
Women's American ORT, c. 1965
Containers
Box 1, Folder 8