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Dalia Dorner

Israeli-Turkish law professor and judge


Summary

Israeli-Turkish law professor and judge

FieldValue
nameDalia Dorner
native_nameדליה דורנר
native_name_langhe
imageDorner.jpg
birth_nameDolly Greenberg
birth_placeIstanbul, Turkey
birth_dateMarch 3, 1934
officeJustice of the Supreme Court of Israel
term_end2004
term_start1993
spouseShmuel Dorner
children2
educationHebrew University of Jerusalem
occupationProfessor of law at Bar-Ilan University
primeministerYitzhak Rabin
ministerDavid Libai

Dalia Dorner (; born March 3, 1934) is an Israeli-Turkish law professor and former Justice of the Supreme Court of Israel, serving from 1993 to 2004. She was one of the judges in the trial of John Demjanjuk.

Biography

Dalia Dorner (née Dolly Greenberg) was born in Istanbul, Turkey. Her father, a wood merchant, Levy Greenberg, immigrated there from Odessa. Her family immigrated once again in 1944, this time to Mandatory Palestine, where her father died shortly after. Her mother sent her to a Youth Aliyah boarding school in Nahariya, from which she continued to the Hebrew Reali School in Haifa.

During her compulsory service in the IDF, she started her law studies in Tel Aviv. There she met her future husband, Shmuel. They married in 1958 and have two sons, Ariel Levy Bendor (b. 1963) and Amir Eliezer (b. 1965). After the army, she completed her law studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Landmark rulings

Dorner required the military authorities to allow personalized epitaphs on soldiers' headstones. Her ruling emphasized the individual versus the collective, observing that "every child is an only child to his parents." She ruled that state must allocate adequate budgets to the Special Education Law to allow children with disabilities to be integrated into ordinary education frameworks. In the Jonathan Danilowitz case, she recognized the right of an El Al cabin attendant to receive a plane ticket for his homosexual partner. Dorner’s broad interpretation of free expression was illustrated in her ruling in the case of Kidum, a night school, which was permitted to use an advertising slogan, "Go and excel!", which has vulgar sexual connotations previously deemed unacceptable.

Awards and honors

In 2010, Dorner was invited to light a torch at the Israeli Independence Day ceremony on Mount Herzl.

References

References

  1. Michaeli, Meirav. (March 23, 2010). "Former justice Dalia Dorner, does Israel respect human dignity?". Haaretz.com.
  2. Abraham-Weiss, Sharon. "Dalia Dorner". Jewish Women's Archive.
  3. Prince-Gibson, Eetta. (April 28, 2008). "A Justice for All (Extract)". The Jerusalem Report.
  4. Ze'ev Segal. (March 2, 2004). "A court without Dalia Dorner". [[Haaretz]].
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