JTS Library Awarded “Recordings at Risk” Grant from the Council on Library and 
Information Resources

The Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) has been selected to 
receive a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council on Library and Information 
Resources (CLIR). This project is made possible by funding from The Andrew W. 
Mellon Foundation. This generous grant will support “Disappearing Jewish 
Cultures and Traditions of the Non-Western World: Digitizing Film Footage and 
Audio Recordings from the Johanna L. Spector Papers and Audio-Visual Materials 
– Phase II.”

This unique collection documents the nearly extinct musical and communal 
traditions of several non-Western Jewish cultures in India, Yemen, Azerbaijan, 
Egypt, Armenia, and elsewhere in the Middle East. Recorded between 1960 and 
1989 during the making of Spector’s ethnographic documentaries, the materials 
are an unused treasure trove that sheds light on the religious ceremonies and 
traditions of people before dispersal from their native lands, such as the 
Cochin Jews of India, Yemenite Jews, and the nearly extinct Samaritans of 
Israel.

JTS was one of 17 institutions to receive this award. The grant provides 
funding to digitize this special collection using state-of-the-art technologies 
at The MediaPreserve, a trusted organization that provides audiovisual 
preservation. The JTS Library previously received a grant in 2018 from CLIR for 
Phase I of digitization of the Spector film archival collection, which involved 
digitizing filmed dailies, workprints, and recorded audio content. The public 
can watch the films and listen to recordings from the collection 
online<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://digitalcollections.jtsa.edu/islandora/object/jts*3A617605__;JQ!!KGKeukY!ic-LM124sevHl7i0xkQ-wBaD0OgbidDBlstRxvuQf5aAtTqnRbkRpHJuXUD-xpJFJgk$
 >.

Naomi Steinberger, JTS project director, says “We’re so grateful for this 
generous award from CLIR. We know that the footage will help build 
understanding of worldwide Jewish traditions and cultures and has already 
contributed to new scholarship in ethnography, ethnomusicology, history, and 
anthropology.”

The JTS Library houses the greatest collection of Judaica outside Israel, 
including nearly 11,000 Hebrew manuscripts; 43,000 fragments from the Cairo 
Genizah; 30,000 rare books, including the world’s largest collection of Hebrew 
incunabula; and more than 400 archival collections comprising 8,000 linear 
feet. Its vast collections are broadly viewed via expanding digital portals, 
revolving on-site exhibitions and rare-book presentations, and through loan 
programs to outstanding museums around the world.


Naomi M. Steinberger
Director of Library Services
Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary
3080 Broadway
New York, NY 10027
__
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