The center has drawn on its duplicate holdings to distribute books to students and scholars, and to establish or strengthen collections at more than 700 research libraries, schools, and museums around the world. The Yiddish Book Center includes a number of different collections: • In 1997, with a grant from the Righteous Persons Foundation, the center launched its
Steven Spielberg Digital Yiddish Library, which has digitized and cataloged more than 12,000 Yiddish titles and made them available for free download from the
Internet Archive. In 2012, the Yiddish Book Center formed a partnership with the
National Library of Israel, which was launching its own project to digitize its entire Hebrew-alphabet collection, including thousands of Yiddish titles. The effort prompted
The New York Times to declare Yiddish "proportionately the most accessible literature on the planet". As of the end of 2014, the titles in the Steven Spielberg Digital Yiddish Library have been downloaded 1.3 million times. • The David and Sylvia Steiner Yizkor Books Collection comprises hundreds of
yizkor books, memorial volumes commemorating Jewish communities in East Europe that were destroyed in the Holocaust. The books in the collection can be searched online. • The Noah Cotsen Library of Yiddish Children's Literature includes about 800 titles, both original Yiddish works and Yiddish translations of classic stories written in other languages. The majority of the titles, which come from the
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research as well as from the center's own collection, have been digitized and included in the Steven Spielberg Digital Yiddish Library. • The Sami Rohr Library of Recorded Yiddish Books is a collection of roughly 150 titles, including novels, short stories, nonfiction works, memoirs, essays, and poetry. The recordings were made at the Jewish Public Library of Montreal (JPL) in the 1980s and '90s by native Yiddish-speaking volunteers. • The Frances Brandt Online Yiddish Audio Library comprises recordings of lectures by, and interviews with, writers and poets who visited the JPL between 1953 and 2005. The Yiddish Book Center is now working with the JPL to digitize the recordings. Ultimately, approximately 1,100 recordings from the collection will be digitized and accessible. • The Wexler Oral History Project is a collection of more than 1,400 oral history interviews, documentary films, and archival footage related to Yiddish language and culture. Many of the interviews comprise
Holocaust survivor testimonies, although the collection also features interviews with contemporary Yiddish scholars, cultural contributors, and students. In 2010, the Yiddish Book Center appointed
Christa Whitney as director of the project, who has since conducted over 1,000 of the collection's interviews and directed documentary films about
Yiddishists with historical significance. In 2013, the project interviewed
Leonard Nimoy. ==Visitor Center and Museum, Public Programs and Resources==