Yoel Zussman Explained

Yoel Zussman
Office:Supreme Court of Israel judge
Term Start:1951
Term End:1980
Office2:President of the Supreme Court of Israel
Term Start2:1976
Term End2:1980
Predecessor2:Shimon Agranat
Successor2:Moshe Landau
Birth Date:24 October 1910
Birth Place:Kraków, Austria-Hungary

Yoel Zussman also spelled Yoel Sussman (Hebrew: יואל זוסמן, born 24 October 1910, died 2 March 1982) was an Israeli jurist and the fourth President of the Supreme Court of Israel, from 1976 to 1980.

Biography

Sussman was born in 1910 in Kraków, Austria-Hungary (now in Poland). He received his LLB from the University of London and his PhD from Heidelberg University. He immigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1934. He was certified as a lawyer and served as Chief Prosecutor of the Israel Defense Forces. In 1951 he was appointed to the Supreme Court and served as its Deputy President for several periods of time until 1953.

In 1965 during the Supreme Court hearings on election appeal case Ya'akov Yardor vs Central Election Committee for the Sixth Knesset, popularly known as El-Ard Petition, Sussman coined definition of Israel as a "self-defending democracy", which was adopted by the Court.[1] Supreme Court upheld ban on El-Ard (English: The Land), a radical Arab electoral list, from participation in the Sixth Knesset elections and Sussman, taking the Supreme Court of West Germany ruling as a precedent, stated that there are supraconstitutional considerations hailing from natural law, that may be superior to any legislation:[2]

Just as an Individual is not bound to agree to being killed, neither is a state is obliged to consent to being annihilated and erased from the map... The German Constitutional Court...spoke of a "fighting democracy", which does not open its doors to acts of sabotage in the guise of legitimate parliamentary activity. For myself, as far as Israel is concerned, I am prepared to confine myself to "self-defending democracy," and tools for defending the existence of the state are at hand, even if we have not found them set forth in detail in the Elections Law[1]

In 1976 he succeeded Shimon Agranat as President of the Supreme Court. He retired in 1980 and was succeeded by Moshe Landau. He was an author of several books on bill laws and arbitration laws.[3] He died in 1982.

Awards and honours

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Barzilai, Gad . Conflicts, and Political Order: A Jewish Democracy in the Middle East. SUNY Press. 1996. 0-7914-2943-1. 191.
  2. Book: Cohen-Almagor, Raphael . Geoffrey Marshall . The Boundaries of Liberty and Tolerance: The Struggle Against Kahanism in Israel . University Press of Florida. 1994. 0-8130-1258-9. registration . 184.
  3. Web site: Presidents of the Supreme Court. Matah. 2008-10-20. he.
  4. Web site: Israel Prize. Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 2008-10-20.
  5. Web site: Israel Prize Official Site - Recipients in 1975 (in Hebrew).
  6. http://elyon1.court.gov.il/eng/Institute_of_Advanced_Judicial_Studies_for_2008.doc Institute of Advanced Judicial Studies