Israeli security forces across the board are on high alert after Tuesday night's deadly spree, which is the third terror attack in a week; relatives of Bnei Brak gunman taken in for questioning, PA's Abbas condemns attack in unusual move
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