Shlomo Alperin had planned to study in religious school Wednesday but instead was attending a funeral, still in shock after witnessing the most violent attack in years in greater Tel Aviv."I want to go to the funerals. I feel a need for the closeness," Alperin said, after five people were gunned down on Tuesday on the streets of Beni Brak.From his flat, the 23-year-old ultra-Orthodox man had heard bursts of gunfire, before seeing his neighbour's body crumpled in a car, and two men dead at a cafe often frequented by Ukrainian construction workers.
TEL AVIV: Shlomo Alperin had planned to study in a religious school on Wednesday but instead was attending a funeral, still in shock after witnessing the most violent attack in years in greater Tel Aviv. “I want to go to the funerals. I feel a need for the closeness,” Alperin said, after five people were gunned down on Tuesday on the streets of Beni Brak. From his flat, the
"I was supposed to go to study today, but now I'm going to a funeral," laments Shlomo Alperin, 23, still in shock from witnessing the most violent attack in years in greater Tel Aviv.