The Jewish National and University Library, where the International
Institute for Jewish Genealogy is located, is a major genealogical
resource in itself. Its origins going back to 1892, the Library is
today the largest repository of Judaica in the world, with extraordinary
and often unique treasures in print, manuscript, microfilm and voice-recorded
form. Genealogists are aided by having an abundance of reference works
and genealogical collections under one roof, including biographical
studies, family and community histories, rabbinical encyclopedias
and "responsa", "Yizkor books", population records,
newspapers, maps, art works and a host of other basic materials in
Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino and every other language of the Jewish world.
Specifically genealogical collections include the Paul Jacobi Library
and Papers (described separately), the Dan Bar-Lev Collection and
a group of books on the antecedents of various Jewish families in
Denmark and Scandinavia generally. In addition, the Library houses
the private archives and correspondence of over 400 scholars, writers,
artists and thinkers, including those of Ahad Ha-Am, Shai Agnon, Walter
Benjamin, Martin Buber, Albert Einstein, Gershom Scholem and Stefan
Sweig, together with the Sassoon Family Archive. Beyond that, it preserves
thousands of Hebrew manuscripts, frequently accompanied by a colophon
containing valuable genealogical information. To these must be added
the over 47,000 Hebrew manuscripts (and over 200,000 fragments) on
microfilm, another potential genealogical resource. Within these categories,
some 2,000 ketubbot (marriage contracts), replete with family information,
has been digitalized from the Library's own collection, together with
many hundreds more from other sources. In addition there are, for
example, a group of over 600 original pinkassim (registers) of communities,
hevrot (associations) and mohelim (circumcisers). And this is not
to mention the digitalization of six early Hebrew newspapers from
the 19th and 20th centuries (Halevanon, Hamaggid, Havazelet, Hazefirah,
Hamelitz and Hazvi/Haor/Hashkafa). In brief, the Library is an ever-growing
treasure-trove for genealogical research. |