A man whose two daughters and wife were killed in a drive-by shooting in the occupied West Bank has slammed the gunman who targeted their car.
Leo Dee, 51, and his family moved from Britain, where he worked as an investment banker, to Israel where he is now a rabbi.
On Friday last week, his daughters Maia, 20, and Rina, 16, and his wife Lucy, were driving through the Hamra settlement when their car was shot at with a Kalashnikov rifle.
His daughters died at the scene and his wife was airlifted to hospital, but after an operation, yesterday it was confirmed that she died too.
During a press conference, Mr Dee said he "went numb" and was "highly rational" when he realised his daughters had died.
He then drove to the hospital to be by his wife who had been hit by two bullets - one through the brain stem and one lodged at the top of her spine.
Following her death, the rabbi spoke of his death saying his family of seven has now become a family of four.
He also criticised the gunman saying he is the "product of a broken culture", as he said: "This anonymous terrorist with a Kalashnikov, what did he achieve, temporary victory? Where's his future? Is he spending time with his children, to teach them decent life values? Does he even have children or is he a child himself?
"Is he the product of a broken culture that doesn't differentiate between good and evil so he doesn't see a future for himself?"
At a funeral service for his daughters on Sunday, Mr Dee said he hopes their memory will be kept alive.
The family also decided to donate Mrs Dee's organs in the hope they can save the lives of others.
Friday's shooting came amid tensions in the West Bank, with new Palestinian armed groups emerging and challenging the Israeli occupation.
Israel captured the West Bank, along with the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, in the 1967 Mideast war. Since then, it has built dozens of settlements in the territory that are now home to more than 500,000 Jewish settlers.
Most of the international community considers Israel's West Bank settlements illegal and an obstacle to peace with the Palestinians. The Palestinians seek the West Bank, along with Gaza and East Jerusalem for their future independent state.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government has made settlement expansion a top priority.
Yesterday, a 15-year-old Palestinian boy was killed by Israeli forces in the Aqabet Jaber refugee camp in Jericho.
Mohammad Fayez Balhan was shot in the head, chest and stomach on Monday.
His aunt Maysoon said: "They shot him in the head. What is going to happen to our people? What will happen to us?"
The Israeli military said it was operating in the refugee camp in a bid to apprehend Palestinians it suspected of attacks against Israelis - and added its forces had responded to being fired at by the suspects.