Dalia Dorner was a Justice of the Supreme Court of Israel from 1993 to 2004.
Background
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.
Education
After the army, she completed her law studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Career
During her compulsory service in the Israel Defense Forces, she started her law studies in Tel Aviv. Dorner worked for the Israel Police for a period, and then re-enlisted as an Israel Defense Forces officer in the Military Advocate General, rising up through the ranks to the position of Chief Military Defense. In 1974 she was appointed as a judge on the Military Court of Appeals, with the rank of Colonel.
She was the first Israeli woman, not serving in the Israeli Women"s Corps, to reach the ranks of Lieutenant Colonel and Colonel.
After retiring from the Israel Defense Forces, Dorner became a District Court Judge, first in the Southern District and later in the Jerusalem District. She was one of the judges who convicted John Demjanjuk and sentenced him to death in 1988, a decision overturned by Israel"s Supreme Court, in 1993.
In April 1993, she was appointed a provisional Supreme Court Justice, and a year later this position was made permanent. In her position, Dorner proved to be an ardent advocate of human rights, as was expressed in her interpretation of the Basic Laws of Israel.
At the same time she was considered unforgiving to white-collar crime.
Toward the end of her career as a Justice she headed the Israeli Central Elections Committee. Dorner retired from the Supreme Court on March 3, 2004. In August 2006, she was appointed president of the Israeli Press Council.
She teaches human rights at the Bar-Ilan University law faculty.
She holds Honorary Doctorates from the Weizmann Institute of Science (2005), and from the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (2008). Dorner required the military authorities to allow personalized epitaphs on soldiers" headstones.
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 with vulgar sexual connotations previously deemed unacceptable.
Membership
She is an honorary member of the American Law Institute.