(Несмотря на то, что этот пост частично дублирует предыдущие, в нем есть некоторая обновлённая информация).
В Израиле основной архив по еврейской истории и генеалогической информации находится в Иерусалиме:
The Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People Jerusalem (CAHJP) : (הארכיון המרכזי לתולדות העם היהודי ירושלים חל"צ (אמת"י :
Центральный Архив Истории Еврейского Народа в Иерусалиме
On January 30, 2013 The Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People and the National Library of Israel (NLI) signed an agreement to implement a merger between the Archives and the Library.
30 января 2013 года CAHJP/אמת"י/ЦАИЕН и Национальная библиотека Израиля (НБИ) подписали договор о слиянии Архива и Библиотеки.
Поэтому Архив следует рассматривать, как
часть НБИ.
Здесь материалы Архива сгрупированы по странам.
Здесь материалы Архива по бывшим странам СССР.
Привожу прямую цитату (англ.) по поводу материалов по б.СССР, имеющихся в Архиве (остальное - по ссылке выше):
"Microfilms and photocopies
Material of Jewish and non-Jewish provenance relating to Jews in over 950 communities from over 40 archives in the former Soviet States, including (approximately) over 3,000,000 microfilm frames and photocopies of documents (16th-20th centuries); material of Jewish provenance, such as two pinkassim from Uman (1774-1837), files from the Jewish communities of Odessa ,St. Petersburg, and Irkutsk, Siberia; letters to Baron David Guenzburg from rabbis, public figures and private individuals, among them Simon Dubnow and material on such Russian-Jewish organizations as the Society for Promotion of Enlightenment among the Jews of Russia (OPE) and its secretary, S Kamenecki, the Alliance for Attainment of Full Rights for Russian Jews, the Jewish Literary Association, the Society for the Study of Jewry, the Society for History and Ethnography in St. Petersburg, the Central Jewish Committee for the Relief of Pogrom Victims; the All-Russian Jewish Congress, Hechalutz, the Society for the Resettlements of Jews in the USSR (OZET), ORT, Tarbut, the Jewish Section of the Association of Former Political Prisoners and Exiles; Jewish political parties, such as the All-Russian Jewish Workers Union (BUND), the Jewish Socialist Workers’ Party (SERP), Poalei Zion, Zeirei Zion, the Talmud Torah in Odessa, the Rabbinical Seminary in Zhitomir, the Jewish community of Mohilev (Ukraine), the Jewish Historical-Archeographical Commission in Kiev, as well as private papers of such individuals as Arkadii Gornfeld, David and Horace Guenzburg, Pesach Marek, and a few members of the Duma, papers of Pauline Wengeroff (author of “Memoiren einer Grossmutter”) and members of her family; material of non-Jewish provenance from the archives of the Czar’s “Secret Police” (1825-1855), the Russian Interior, Finance, Military, Commerce and Education Ministries, high and local courts, magistrates in the territory of Belarus and the Ukraine, as well as private archives of Polish noble families, such as Landskorunskij, Lubomirskij, Potockij, Radziwil, Sapeha, Tarlo, Treter, Zamojskij; files from central government organs (14th-20th centuries), central and local military administrations, such as the Office of the Military Ministry and the Supreme Commander’s Staff of the Russian Army; from regional and city administrations, from private papers of higher Tsarist officials, as well as from Soviet government institutions; files from the German Foreign Office on Russian Jewry (1879-1920)."