The Beit Ariela Library includes a reading hall, a lending department, and several special libraries. The Library includes more than half a million books in different languages (Hebrew, English, French, German, Russian, Spanish, and Yiddish). The Library provides its visitors access to databases in various fields of knowledge (in Hebrew and in English); registered borrowers may use this service from their homes. Besides the collections of books the Library possesses journals, newspapers, video recordings, photographs; the collection of musical CDs accounts about 8000. The Library subscribes to 180 different periodicals; there are about 9 thousand registered borrowers. The Library network throughout the City contains more than 21 branches and has around 37,201 (2018) active members.
Special departments • Periodicals Library – a collection of
Hebrew press from the end of the 19th century and up to the present day. Most periodicals are also available on
microfilm. •
Ahad Ha'am Library – holds rare and unique publications on education, the history of Israel, Diaspora communities, as well as
Hebrew literature, books on arts,
Passover Hagadas and a collection of publications with dedications. • Rambam (
Maimonides) Library – religious scientific library that provides about 100 thousand books and different computer databases. • Design and Visual Information Library – collection of visual information on different subjects. The Collection contains more than half a million photos, pictures, postcards, reproductions, caricatures, leaflets, brochures, catalogs – which are subdivided into three categories: Personalities, Countries, and Themes. • 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. • Theatre Library – alongside a large number of plays, the Library contains the Theatre Archive, named after
Yehuda Gabai. The archive is a large collection of documentary materials on the history of Israeli and Hebrew theatre. The archive comprises posters, programmes from performances, mock-ups of scenery, and personal archives of outstanding theatre figures. ==External links==