|
Library |
YIVO Library Catalog Now Available Online
The YIVO Library is pleased to present the first phase of its online catalogue. This first edition includes 60,000 database records, mostly for monographic books, in all European languages, as well as in transliterated ("Romanized") Yiddish and Hebrew.
Please note that the online catalog represents only a portion of our extensive holdings and is very much a work in progress! (Please continue to consult the card catalog in the Reading Room at the Center for Jewish History for the major portion of the library's holdings.)
Vilna Collection
The Vilna Collection
is the core collection of the YIVO Library. It is the surviving remnant
of YIVO's prewar library in Vilna and also contains many books from the
world-famous Strashun Library. Both institutions were looted by the Nazis
during World War II. After the war, YIVO was able to recover some of its
library materials with the help of the U.S. Army, and also received books
from the Strashun Library. (The other surviving Strashun Library books were
transferred to the library of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.)
The Vilna Collection consists of about 50,000 books and periodicals in Hebrew, Yiddish,
Russian, German, Polish, and other languages and is divided into subcollections:
Holocaust Collections
The YIVO Library
is especially strong in resources for studying the
Holocaust. When the President's Commission on the Holocaust (the precursor
to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum) was first appointed in 1979,
the "Bible of the Holocaust period" used in the swearing-in ceremony was
a Hebrew Bible from the YIVO Library's Vilna Collection. (The Bible, printed
in London in 1861 and bequeathed by its owner, Yehuda Behak of Odessa, to
the Great Synagogue of Vilna, was later donated to the Strashun Library.
When this library was looted by the Nazis during World War II, the Bible
was confiscated for use in a proposed "Institute for the Study of the Jewish
Question." It was among the items recovered by YIVO after the war.)
Important components of the library's Holocaust collections include:
Elias Tcherikower Collection(3,500 volumes)Elias Tcherikower (1881-1943), was one of YIVO's founders and the head of YIVO's Historical Section. His extensive library and archive were hidden in France during World War II and later brought to YIVO in New York. The Tcherikower Collection is especially strong in its documentation, in several languages, of Jewish life in the Russian Empire. Some of the Russian-language pamphlets and books from the Tcherikower Collection are available on microfilm from IDC Publishers, The Netherlands. Tcherikower's papers, photographs, and other artifacts (important primary sources on the anti-Jewish pogroms in Ukraine in 1918-1920) are among the holdings of the YIVO Archives.
Yiddish Collections(40,000 titles)There is no single Yiddish collection in the YIVO Library. Rather, the library's 40,000 Yiddish-language titles are scattered throughout the library's other collections. Together, they comprise the largest collection of Yiddish books in the world. In 1990, The Yiddish Catalog and Authority File of the YIVO Library, in five volumes, was published by G. K. Hall. Included in it are reproductions of the library's entire Yiddish author-title card catalog and the catalog of its microfilmed periodicals. Virtually all of the major works of Yiddish literature are represented in the YIVO Library, as well as many obscure and forgotten titles. The library has copies of many early editions by Mendele Moykher Sforim, I. L. Peretz, and Sholem Aleichem. One genre of Yiddish literature that has been singled out for special attention in recent years is children's literature. Some of the most notable Jewish artists of the 20th century contributed illustrations to Yiddish children's books. Among these were the avant-garde Soviet artists Issachar Ber Ryback, Joseph Tchaikov, and El Lissitzky. A microfiche collection, Yiddish Children's Literature from the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, containing over 1,000 titles, was co-published by YIVO and Clearwater Publishing Company in 1988. Over the years, the library has acquired the personal libraries of many outstanding Yiddish literary and cultural figures, including the critics Shmuel Niger and Kalman Marmor, the folklorist Y. L. Cahan, the novelist Joseph Opatoshu, the historian Shlomo Bickel, the essayist Chaim Zhitlowsky, the bibliographer Ephim Jeshurun, the dramatist Nahum Stutchkoff, the theater archivist Sholem Perlmutter, and the YIVO scholars Mendl Elkin (YIVO's Head Librarian from 1938-1962), Shlomo Noble, and Max Weinreich. Personal libraries acquired by YIVO include:
Bund Archives & Library of the Jewish Labor Movement(25,000 volumes)YIVO's most important recent accession is the Bund Archives and Library of the Jewish Labor Movement, acquired by YIVO in 1992. Among its 25,000-plus volumes are many in Yiddish. The Bund collection is also very strong in materials in other languages (especially Russian) on the labor and socialist movements in Europe and America.
William Milwitzky Ladino Collection(400 volumes)The YIVO Library has a small but important collection of books in Ladino (also known as Judezmo, or Judeo-Spanish), the language of Sephardic Jews. This collection, which also includes books in Western European languages on Jews in the Iberian peninsula and their descendants throughout the Mediterranean basin, was donated to YIVO by the family of YIVO supporter Dr. William Milwitzky after his death in 1956. The Milwitzky Collection includes classic religious texts, such as the Me'am Lo'ez commentary; Ladino translations of foreign novels and dramas; and curiosities such as a Ladino Singer Sewing manual. This rare and fragile collection was cataloged and microfilmed in 1993, with the support of a grant from the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation.
CAPTION FOR IMAGE AT TOP OF PAGE:
|