Jerusalem, Israel - May 7, 2018 - Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, on Monday, 22 Iyar, hosted a swearing-in ceremony for new judges at Beit Hanasi in Jerusalem, Israel. Of the eighteen,  six are to be judges in the District Courts, nine Magistrate Judges and three registrars. 

The eighteen new judges were called individually to the podium, to read a brief oath and sign, then to be greeted by the President,  Minister of Justice Ayelet Shaked, and Supreme Court Justice Esther Hayut.

The President noted at the beginning his remarks, of the eighteen new judges, thirteen are women.  Rivlin, went on to say, "the Jewish state must be Jewish and democratic...The fundamental principle of democracy is majority rule and with the understanding and agreement of the minority to accept the majority decision, even when convinced that the majority is wrong. The majority rules, you can try to persuade them to change their minds. Democracy confers the right to use all the tools of the legitimate court order to stop the execution of the decision. But at the end of the day and maybe at the beginning, basic rules of democracy must prevail."

The President of the Supreme Court, Justice Esther Hayut used her opportunity to speak to compare the Israeli Supreme Court to the United States Supreme Court. With Knesset legislation pending that could overrule Supreme Court judgments, Hayut stated, "The judiciary is under attack blatant and unprecedented, which poses a serious threat.  The proposal is bad and dangerous and may cause irreparable damage to Israel in the international arena. "

Concluding speaker was Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked. "Yesterday, after more than twenty years, Israel has moved a significant step towards the realization of the vision of the Chief Justice Moshe Landau. I believe that, at the end, the Israeli Knesset will complete the process of drafting the legislation. This is a necessary step, the end of the day, to restore public confidence in the justice system."

Members of the committee for selecting judges, the chairman of the Bar Association, and presidents of courts, joined to toast the new judges. Extended families filled the main hall at Beit Hanasi, smiling and proud, and a few tears could be seen.

One of the new judges Avraham (Avi) Gurman, learned in Yeshivat Birkat Moshe, a hesder yeshiva located in the Mitzpeh Nevo neighborhood of Ma'ale Adumim. When  Rav Haim Sabato, who founded the yeshiva in 1977, heard of the appointment, Rav Sabato called his former talmid to give Gurman a mazel tov.