The JTS Library holds 425,000 volumes & 400 archival collections-the largest, most extensive collection of Hebraic/Judaic materials in the Western Hemisphere

Joined May 2013
52 Photos and videos
31 Dec 2020
This promises to be a thought-provoking program. Join us! jtsa.edu/poetry-and-music-gr…

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Watch this wonderful book talk by Mel Scult, who discusses ways in which Mordecai Kaplan’s spirituality was much closer to Heschel’s than you might expect! jtsa.edu/communing-of-the-sp…

Join us on a new “Virtual Voyage” to a Jewish community in medieval France. Enjoy! jtsa.edu/what-a-manuscript-c…

Just found in JTS Library: invitation to ground-breaking of first Haifa to Jerusalem railroad—linking the Holy City to the coast. My, how things have changed!
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In the category of “you never know what a cataloger might find,” Rabbi Cliff Miller recently cataloged a modern Persian translation of the Babylonian= Persian Talmud. Look at these gorgeous end-papers, a (sideways) image of ancient Jerusalem!
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JTS reference librarian Ina Cohen recently responded to an inquiry from a member of the Cherokee Nation about rituals similar to Jewish ones. Are they one of the Ten Lost Tribes? Century-old writings in our Rare Book Room say yes, Ina explained, but scholarship says no.
24 Jun 2020
Hear Laura Arnold Leibman speak about her fantastic new book, an immensely instructive chapter on Judaism and Race in the colonial Americas: jtsa.edu/art-of-the-jewish-f…. JTS Library book talks!
17 Jun 2020
Cliff Miller just cataloged a rare book documenting the work of Soncino publishers. An example from 1485 (in our collection) states, “Torah will emerge from Zion and the Lord’s word from Soncino,” not Jerusalem. Where Jewish books are printed is Jerusalem! (See last line below.)
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10 Jun 2020
JTS Library’s new Rare Book Room. Will be an amazing place to explore and discover! We can’t wait to “move in!” We hope you will visit us here.
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27 May 2020
For those who have difficulty imagining what the revelation at Sinai looked like, a little help from the JTS Library: a Haggadah manuscript from Leipnik, 1732. Have an inspiring Shavuot!
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14 May 2020
If not for the pandemic, a group sponsored by the JTS Library would have been there today to learn about the Cairo Geniza. Sad we couldn’t do it.
I'm rather chuffed to have won @Cambridge_Uni's @OPDACam '#Cambridge's Empty Spaces' photography competition with this snap taken on a post-rain run! 📸🌈#RainbowsForNHS
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14 May 2020
Book shelves are ready for books. Beginning to plan for return of books in new conditions. We’ll be ready, whatever the world requires!
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14 May 2020
Wall decoration in new JTS Library, based upon decorations in our manuscripts. Beautiful!
Illustration in book for counting the Omer, in our collection. Israel moving forward, toward the mountain and ultimate redemption. Where are we in our current count from confinement to renewed freedom?
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28 Apr 2020
An unusual work in our collection—manuscript of a failed play by Theodor Herzl. Sometimes you have great ideas (a Jewish State), sometimes not so much. Happy Yom Ha’atzmaut!
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23 Apr 2020
JTS reference librarian Ina Cohen answering student’s inquiry from home. We’re still here to support your research!
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21 Apr 2020
JTS Library Director of Library Services working remotely. What do you need? We’ll help! Happy National Library Day!
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20 Apr 2020
The wedding of Hayya Gletzer to Hayyim Schwarcbard took place on September 17, 1946 in the DP camp of Bergen Belsen. Both lived in Cracow before the War and were married to different spouses who perished. Their ketubbah testifies to the desire of survivors to start new lives.
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