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The National Library of Israel (NLI; Hebrew: הספרייה הלאומית, romanized: HaSifria HaLeumit; Arabic: المكتبة الوطنية في إسرائيل), formerly Jewish National and University Library (JNUL; Hebrew: בית הספרים הלאומי והאוניברסיטאי, romanized: Beit Ha-Sfarim Ha-Le'umi ve-Ha-Universita'i), is the library dedicated to collecting the ...
The Union List of Israel (ULI), or Israel Union Catalog, is a public online union catalog in Israel containing over eight million bibliographic records based on the catalogs of the major research libraries in Israel - including all university libraries, most colleges, and several additional research libraries.
Kiddush Hashem Archive; Liebermann House, Nahariya; Massuah Institute for Holocaust Studies; Moreshet Archive, Mordechai Anielevich Memorial Holocaust Study and Research Center, Givat Haviva, Kibbutz Artzi; National Photo Collection, Israel Government Press Office "Phonotheque" National Sound Archives, National Library of Israel; Steven ...
Israel State Archives (ISA; Hebrew: ארכיון מדינת ישראל Arkhiyon Medinat Yisra'el) is the national archive of Israel, located in Jerusalem. The archive houses some 400 million documents, maps , stamps , audio tapes, video clips, photographs and special publications.
This is an expanding list of Israeli libraries. The list is based on the information provided by The National Library of Israel [ 1 ] and a list of 680 public libraries provided by the Israeli Ministry of Culture and Sports [ 2 ]
Israel Dance Archive and Library – the central library in Israel for storage of information on dance history. More than 2000 folders with archive documents, over 8000 books, as well as journals, video recordings and other media on the subject: "The history of Israeli and Foreign Dance" - from the beginning of the 20th century and up to today.
Historical Jewish Press is an online archive of historical newspapers written and published by Jews.The database enables, through digitization, virtual access to the Hebrew press in most of its years of existence, starting from the late 18th Century up to more recent years, along with the Jewish newspapers and periodicals in Yiddish, Judeo-Arabic, English, French, Ladino, Polish, Russian ...
Creating a communication channel with the public – The public will be able to request more information and digital scans. Increasing awareness of NLI's collections' potential – both existing collections and the library as a place to gather new materials; Increasing traffic to the library, both physical and digital (the library's website)