Background
Haim Cohn was born in Lübeck, Germany in 1911 to a religious family.
educationist university professor
Haim Cohn was born in Lübeck, Germany in 1911 to a religious family.
In 1930 he immigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine and studied at Mercaz HaRav Yeshiva. He returned to Palestine in 1933 as a lawyer and with a Doctor of Philosophy in law.
He was chairman of a World Agudath Israel branch in Hamburg. He was also a Hazzan in Mea Shearim. He later returned to Germany to study law at Frankfurt University.
In 1936 he was certified as a lawyer and the following year he opened an office in Jerusalem.
After the establishment of the State of Israel, he was appointed manager of the legislation department of the Ministry of Justice, and later became State Attorney. In 1949 he was made Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Justice and Attorney General of Israel a year later.
As Attorney General, he decided to indict Malchiel Gruenwald, starting the Rudolf Kastner trial and decided to ignore the (British based) law "and refrained from pressing charges on the conduct of homosexual relations between consenting adults." In 1952 he was also Minister of Justice, without being an MK. In 1960 he was appointed to the Supreme Court of Israel, a position he held until his retirement in 1981. He wrote five books, including The Trial and Death of Jesus in 1968, in which he argued that it was the Romans, not the Sanhedrin, who tried and executed Jesus.
He died in 2002. President of the Supreme Court Aharon Barak cited him as one of the founders of Israeli law.
In addition to his civil service, he was also a visiting lecturer in the Tel Aviv University (from 1956 to 1969) and Hebrew University of Jerusalem (from 1954 to 1976) law schools, a representative of Israel in the United Nations Human Rights Council and a member of the International Court of Justice in Hague. He was a member of the "T"hila" Movement for Israeli Jewish secularism.