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Israel’s Aharon Barak receives
2006 Gruber Justice Prize
Note to editors:
As President Barak is still writing judgments, he will not be giving media
interviews.
Media are invited to attend his award address and discussion at 4pm at Harvard
Law School.
Leading judicial figures are available to comment
“At great personal risk, Barak has been a towering figure in protecting
democratic values, human rights
and the independence of the judiciary.”
“We, the judges in modern democracies, are responsible for protecting democracy
both from terrorism
and from the means the state wants to use to fight terrorism.”
(Aharon Barak 2002)
Media
Release
Aharon Barak,
retired President of the Supreme Court of Israel, will receive the 2006 Gruber
Justice Prize.
President Barak is renowned for
championing an activist judiciary and the rule of law and democracy.
It’s a remarkable journey for a man
who as a child survived the Holocaust, and was at one point smuggled out of the
Kovno Ghetto in a sack of clothes.
Barak retired on 16 September as
President of Israel’s top court after 11 years at its helm, and 28 years in its
service. Under his term, the Supreme Court has issued rulings that have ensured
the just application of the law for both Jews and Palestinians, and that have
protected democracy both from terrorism and from the means the state wants to
use to fight terrorism.
Barak has said that his role as a
judge is to “protect human rights and the dignity and equality of every human
being”. He has spoken widely of how his experiences in the Holocaust have shaped
his outlook and of the need to preserve the rule of democratic law not just in
times of peace but also in times of war and terror. He stresses, “We need laws
most in times of war”.
“Judges are under enormous pressure
because of their willingness to make justice available to all people,” says
Dennis Archer – one of the selection panel, and a former President of the
American Bar Association.
“From time to time one person stands
out, someone who under great pressure and at personal danger, nevertheless
administers the law according to the facts before him, protecting the human
rights of all. Aharon Barak is such a man, and that’s why he merits this
prestigious award, says Archer.
“For me, Aharon Barak is the ultimate
judge: competence, integrity, exceptional talent and most of all courage,” says
Claire L'Heureux Dubé, a former Canadian Supreme Court justice.
“He is one of a kind: as a person he
is warm and unpretentious, a superb writer and terrific speaker, a great human
being with an incomparable sense of justice and service to the people. As a
judge, he is a great jurist who allies common sense with a sophisticated and
learned mind. Most of all, he is a profound humanist,” she says.
“Justice redresses the arbitrary use
of power by an individual or by a group,” says Peter Gruber, Chairman of the
Peter Gruber Foundation. “Barak is a role model for judges everywhere,” he says.
The Justice Prize is one of five
Gruber Foundation Prizes. The others are Cosmology, Genetics, Neuroscience, and
Women’s Rights.
For further information
www.scienceinpublic.com or contact Niall Byrne:
niall@scienceinpublic.com,
+1 314 448 9909 – US cell, +61 417 131 977 – Australian cell.
Background: 2006 Justice Prize
Born in Lithuania in 1936, Barak was
one of the very few children to escape the Kovno Ghetto. He immigrated with his
parents to Israel in 1947.
He studied law, economics and
international relations at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and received an MA
in law in 1958 and a doctorate in 1963. Barak was appointed Associate Professor
of Law at the Hebrew University in 1968, and was made Professor in 1972.
Barak participated in the preparation
of an international treaty on bills of exchange for the United Nations, and
served as Israel’s Attorney General for three years from 1975, before his
appointment to the Supreme Court in 1978.
Barak has lectured widely
internationally, including in the US, and is the author of several books in
English and Hebrew including The Judge in a Democracy (2006),
Purposive Interpretation in Law (2005) and Judicial Discretion
(1989).
Under Barak’s helm, the Israeli
Supreme Court has interpreted Israel’s basic law as its constitution and has,
when necessary, challenged Knesset laws on that basis.
The official citation reads:
"The 2006
Justice Prize of the Peter Gruber Foundation is proudly presented to Aharon
Barak, former President of the Israeli Supreme Court – jurist, scholar,
advocate, public servant and educator.
Aharon Barak is a person of outstanding courage and principle who has devoted
his life to the promotion of justice and the just rule of law.At great personal
risk, he has been a towering figure in protecting democratic values, human
rights and the independence of the judiciary."
The Justice
Prize is the second Gruber Prize to be awarded in 2006 – with the Genetics,
Neuroscience and Women’s Rights prizes to be presented in October and November.
In August, the Cosmology Prize was
awarded to Dr. John Mather and the COBE team for their work confirming that our
universe was born in a hot big bang.
Since 2001, the Justice Prize of the Peter Gruber
Foundation has recognized individuals who have furthered the
cause of justice as delivered through the legal system. The Prize carries
a gold medal and a US$250,000 cash prize.
Past
Winners of the Justice Prize
-
Malaysian attorney Dato Param Cumaraswamy who, at considerable risk
to himself, stood up for the independence of the judiciary, received the
prize in 2005.
-
Chief Justice Arthur Chaskalson,
the first president of South Africa’s Constitutional Court, and Deputy
Chief Justice Pius Langa, an advocate and judge who helped establish
South Africa’s Constitution as a model for modern democratic societies,
jointly won the 2004 prize.
-
Canadian
judges Madame Justice Rosalie Silberman Abella and Madame Justice
Bertha Wilson jointly received the 2003 prize for their contributions to
jurisprudence in
Canada and beyond. Abella, who served on the Ontario
Court of Appeal for 20 years before her appointment to the Supreme Court, is
one of Canada’s best known and respected legal minds; Wilson, the first
woman appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada, has forged a
reputation as a champion of the underdog and a dedicated proponent of fair
play.
-
Fali Sam
Nariman, Member of the Parliament of India, Senior Advocate in the Supreme
Court of India and President of the Bar Association of India, received the
2002 prize. Nariman has
played an important role in
both establishing and enforcing the law in India.
He was cited for promoting the universal
rule of law in a modern era of emerging democracies and supportive systems
of jurisprudence.
-
The Honorable Justice Anthony Roy Gubbay,
former Chief Justice of Zimbabwe, and the Law Society of Zimbabwe
were the joint recipients of the inaugural Justice Prize in 2001, honored
for upholding the independence of the judiciary and protecting the rights
of the people of Zimbabwe
Justice Advisory Board
Justice Prize recipients are selected by the Prize’s
distinguished Advisory Board. Members of the 2006 Advisory Board are:
-
The Honorable Rosalie Silberman Abella, Justice,
Supreme Court of Canada
-
Dennis Archer, Esq., Former President, American Bar
Association, Former Mayor of Detroit
-
Giuseppe Bisconti, Esq., Attorney, Studio Legale
Bisconti, Rome
-
Martin Lee, Esq., Attorney, Office of Martin C.M.
Lee, QC., SC., Hong Kong
-
The Honorable Sandra Day O'Connor, Justice, Supreme
Court of the United States of America, retired
Curriculum Vitae
 |
Aharon Barak, born in Lithuania in 1936, is
married and the father of four. He studied law, economics and
international relations at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Barak
received an MA in law in 1958, and a doctorate in 1963.
-
1968: Appointed Associate Professor of
Law at Hebrew University
-
1970-72: Participated in the
preparation of an international treaty on bills of exchange in the
framework of the United Nations Commission of International Trade
Law
-
1970-72: Lectured at New York
University School of Law
-
1972: Appointed Professor at the
School of Law, Hebrew University
-
1973: Received Kaplan Prize for
excellence in science and research
-
1974: Appointed Dean of Faculty of
Law, Hebrew University
-
1975: Received Israel Prize in legal
sciences
-
1976: Member of the Israeli Academy of
Sciences
-
1975-78: Attorney General
-
1978: Appointed Justice of the Supreme
Court
-
1978-94: Adjunct professor at the
School of Law, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
-
1993: Appointed Deputy President of
the Supreme Court
-
1995: Appointed President of the
Supreme Court
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| A larger picture is
available on request
niall@scienceinpublic.com |
http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/1990_1999/1998/6/Aharon+Barak+-+President+of+the+Supreme+Court.htm
(Foreign Affairs biography)
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/8145.html
(2006 book)
http://my.brandeis.edu/news/item?news_item_id=101585&show_release_date=1
(speech by Barak on his own background, his role as a judge, democracy in war
and peace, quotes)
http://www.daat.ac.il/DAAT/ezrachut/english/hillel.htm
(article on Barak by Israeli think tank; power of supreme court)
http://www.law.utoronto.ca/students_content.asp?distingID=56&cType=Distinguished&itemPath=2/2/12/16/3&contentId=352
(University of Toronto link)
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1132053868307&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
(Jerusalem Post)
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1150885927294&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
(Jerusalem Post)
http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=32944
(recent Yale University article)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,2763,1250608,00.html
(Guardian article on court and wall)
http://www.peace-security.org.il/english/news.events.asp?id=533
(another wall article)
http://elyon1.court.gov.il/eng/home/index.html
(Supreme Court of Israel website)
0ther
Peter Gruber Foundation Prizes
Each with a $250,000 cash award – will be presented as follows:
-
Genetics: Tuesday 10 October at the American
Society for Human Genetics Annual Meeting in New Orleans;
-
Neuroscience: on Sunday 15 October at the
Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting in Atlanta;
-
Women’s Rights: Thursday 2 November at
Columbia University Law School, New York City.
-
Cosmology: was presented to John Mather and
the COBE team in August 2996.
For details of the prizes and our partners please visit
www.petergruberfoundation.org or
contact our media advisor: Niall Byrne, Niall Byrne:
niall@scienceinpublic.com,
+1 314 448 9909 – US cell, +61 417 131 977 – Australian cell.
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