Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award

The Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award is an award made annually by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel to "an individual or NGO that has made a unique contribution to the advancement of human rights in Israel". The award was established in 1981 but was renamed in 1983 after the murder of activist Emil Grunzweig by a grenade thrown by a right-wing activist during a Peace Now demonstration against the war in Lebanon.

Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award
Awarded fora unique contribution to the advancement of human rights in Israel
CountryIsrael
Presented byAssociation for Civil Rights in Israel
First awarded1981

Winners of the award

Winners of the award have included:

  • 1981Gabriel Stern, journalist for Al Hamishmar
  • 1982Yehuda Litani, Haaretz reporter in the occupied territories; special posthumous recognition to Dr. Robert Walsh, a Jewish journalist in Germany
  • 1983 – Lieutenant Colonel Dov Yirmiya, for his activities promoting the welfare of civilians in Lebanon; this was the first year the award was named after Emil Grunzweig
  • 1984Moshe Negbi, editor of the radio program "Din Udvarim"
  • 1985Baruch Meiri, journalist for Maariv
  • 1986 – Prof. Yitzhak Zamir, former legal advisor to the government
  • 1987 – High court justice Zvi Berenson
  • 1988 – Reporters in the occupied territories
  • 1989Alice Shalvi, the founder of the Israel Women's Network
  • 1990 – Yitzhak Kadman, head of the Israel National Council for the Child
  • 1991 – Dr. Lotta Saltzburger, a founder of the Hotline for Victims of Violence
  • 1992Bassem Eid, the founder of the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group; special award to Mr. James Ya'acov Rosenthal, journalist, for his lifelong devotion to human rights
  • 1993Eyal Simchoni, attorney
  • 1994Yitzhak Clinton Bailey, campaigner for Bedouin rights
  • 1995 – Foundation for aid to women and girls victims of violence in the Arab sector
  • 1996Gideon Levy, Haaretz journalist
  • 1997 – Community Defense, a legal organisation that assists residents of impoverished neighborhoods in obtaining their rights; the Gouarish family for agreeing to donate the organs of their son, killed by Israeli Defence Forces fire, to recipients both Jewish and Arab
  • 1998 – Workers' Hotline, for their activities promoting the rights of foreign workers; Major General Hareven; special lifetime award to Shulamit Aloni
  • 1999Physicians for Human Rights and its founder Ruchama Marton
  • 2000Haaretz journalist Dr. Yossi Algazi
  • 2002Miriam Darmoni Sharvit and Sigal Rosen of the hotline for foreign workers
  • 2003 – the women of Machsom Watch, organization of Israeli women who monitor checkpoints
  • 2004Hanna Safran, feminist
  • 2006Adva Center for analysis of Israeli policy
  • 2007Kolech ("Your Voice", fem.), the religious Zionist feminist movement
  • 2008 – The group for free legal aid for foreign workers at Tel Aviv University
  • 2009 – Ruth and Paul Kedar of the Yesh Din organization for human rights
gollark: It's "not real" in the sense that numbers and differential equations and perfectly accurate triangles and such do not exist in reality, but do allow you to make really good models of it.
gollark: Spirit-grade insults aren't trivial either.
gollark: Becoming spirit is hard. You need lots of training/experience in engineering, physics, insults and criticism.
gollark: Based on the website it has some nice features and all, but it's probably still a potato compared to a modern phone or tablet in most ways.
gollark: The "fx-CG50".
  • "The Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award". Association for Civil Rights in Israel. Full list of prizewinners from 1991 onward.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.