Jacob (Yaakov) Turkel | |
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Born | 1935 Tel Aviv |
Nationality | Israeli |
Alma mater | Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
Known for | Former Supreme Court of Israel Justice |
Jacob (Yaakov) Turkel (Hebrew: יעקב טירקל; born in 1935 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli judge, and former Supreme Court of Israel Justice.[1]
His family immigrated to Israel in 1933 from Vienna, Austria. Turkel served as a judge for 38 years, a decade of that time on the Israeli Supreme Court.[2] In June 2010, he was appointed to head the Israeli special independent Turkel Commission of Inquiry into the Gaza flotilla raid.[3]
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Turkel moved to Jerusalem at the age of five and studied at the Ma'aleh school, and then studied law at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, graduating from its Law School in 1960.[4][5][6] From 1967 on, he served on various courts, including the Shalom Court, as a Regional Court judge.[5] From 1980 to 1995 he served as President of the Beersheba District Court (during which time he took two years off to serve as an acting Supreme Court justice).[4][5]
Turkel served as an Israeli Supreme Court Justice from 1995 until 2005.[5]
In August 2000 he wrote in an opinion that by filling in gaps of missing text in a 2,000-year-old Dead Sea Scroll, and deciphering and putting together scroll fragments, a scholar had shown "originality and creativity" that gave him a copyright in his work.[7] In October 2000, he rejected an appeal by Holocaust survivors and the Simon Wiesenthal Center against the first Israeli performance of a work by German composor Richard Wagner, who Holocaust survivors and others say promoted anti-Semitism.[8][9]
In June 2004, he issued a temporary injunction prohibiting the State of Israel from removing thousands of tons of earth and rubble mixed with assorted archaeologically rich artifacts laying on Jerusalem's Temple Mount. He still sits on a military court appeals panel.[10]
Turkel was known during his tenure on the Supreme Court for writing a relatively large number of dissenting opinions, compared to his fellow Justices.[11] This accorded with the Supreme Court opinion in which he wrote about the right of the individual to "shout out [his own] truth", and the article he wrote in Mehkarei Mishpat (Bar-Ilan University Law Review) in which he said: "The stand of the individual against an `overwhelming majority' is not a negligible matter."[11]
Turkel has taught at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, the University of Tel Aviv, the Law School of Netanya Academic College, and other academic institutions.[6]
He headed a public commission that was set up in 1999 to reform Israel's inheritance law.[12] The commission proposed in 2006 that the law's definition of a couple be altered from "husband and wife", so that it would apply to both gay and heterosexual couples.[1][12][13] He also served as a member of the Committee of Judicial Appointments.[2]
Turkel sits on the panel redesigning Israel's currency, chairs Yad Vashem's Commission for the Designation of the Righteous, which recognizes non-Jews who saved Jews during the Holocaust, and is on the Board of Governors and Executive Council of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.[2][5][6][14]
In June 2010, he was appointed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to head the Israeli special independent commission of inquiry, referred to as the Turkel Commission, into the events in the flotilla in Gaza.[15]
The Commission will investigate whether Israel's actions in preventing the arrival of ships in Gaza were in accordance with international law.[3] It will focus among other things on considering the security considerations for imposing a naval blockade on the Gaza Strip and the conformity of the naval blockade with the rules of international law; the conformity of the actions during the raid to principles of international law; and the actions taken by those who organized and participated in the flotilla, and their identities.[3]
Also on the Commission are former Technion University President Amos Horev and two other members, Miguel Deutch and Reuven Merchav, added in July 2010. Shabtai Rosenne, Bar Ilan University Professor of International Law, also served on the Commission from its establishment until his death on 21 September 2010.[16] In addition, the Commission has two foreign observers, former First Minister of Northern Ireland David Trimble, and former head of the Canadian military's judiciary, Judge Advocate General Ken Watkin, who will take part in hearings and discussions, but not vote on the final conclusions.[17][18]