Mother of two British sisters murdered in West Bank shooting dies

Mother of two British sisters, 20 and 15, murdered in West Bank shooting dies in hospital three days after the car they were all in was attacked by gunman

  • Maia and Rina Dee, 20 and 15, died instantly when car was shot at in West Bank
  • Their mother, Lucy Dee, 45, was left in a critical condition but she has now died 

The mother of two British-Israeli sisters who were murdered in a drive-by shooting in the West Bank has died today after she was left critically injured in the same attack.

Maia and Rina Dee, 20 and 15, died instantly when their car was shot at by a suspected Palestinian gunman near the settlement of Hamra in the Jordan Valley on Friday.

Their mother, Lucy, 45, who was travelling with the sisters during the attack, was left in a critical condition.

But three days after the attack, Lucy has died at Hadassah University hospital as a result of her injuries, officials said today. Her family said they have decided to donate the mother’s organs in order to save the lives of others, reports the Jerusalem Post. 

The husband and father of the victims, Rabbi Leo Dee, witnessed the shooting from another car and was unharmed. 

The devastated father broke down in tears at Maia and Rina’s funeral on Sunday as he told how the memory of his daughters will be kept alive. Now, Rabbi Dee must grapple with the heartbreaking reality that his wife is no longer alive.  

Mother Lucy Dee, 45, died as a result of her injuries following the drive-by shooting – three days after her daughters Rina (centre) and Maia (right) were killed in the attack

Three days after the attack, Lucy (pictured) has died in hospital as a result of her injuries, hospital officials said today

Family members mourn next to the bodies of the two British-Israeli sisters Maya and Rina Dee during their funeral in the Israeli settlement of Kfar Etzion in the West Bank on Sunday

The mother and her two daughters were killed after suspected Palestinian gunmen opened fire on their car in the Jordan Valley on Friday (pictured with policemen at the scene)

The Dee family was originally from London but moved to Efrat in the West Bank nine years ago.

‘On behalf of all the citizens of Israel, I send my heartfelt condolences to the Dee family on the death of the mother, Lucy, who was murdered, along with her two daughters Maia and Rina,’ Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said today. 

On Sunday, mourners, including school friends of Maia and Rina, gathered at the funeral in the settlement of Kfar Etzion in the West Bank and sang songs of grief under in the cemetery’s prayer hall.

READ MORE: Britain’s Chief Rabbi pays tribute to two ‘much loved’ British sisters murdered in West Bank drive-by shooting

In an emotional tribute, Rabbi Dee called his daughters flames, saying they will ‘bring more light into the world’ after their deaths. 

Choking back tears, Rabbi Dee added: ‘You have inspired and loved us. In return we will love you forever.’

The sisters’ bodies were covered in pieces of cloth embroidered with the star of David, one black and the other blue. 

Rabbi Dee hugged his daughter’s bodies tightly, then sat with his three surviving children. 

In his tribute to Maia he said: ‘You were always an angel and now you will always be our guardian angel.

‘You wanted to sign up for another year of national service, where you could really make a difference. But mummy and I wanted you to start your studies and maybe meet a special boy.

‘But you insisted that girls like you always do two years of volunteering so we waited to see what and where this would be.’

Turning to Rina, he said: ‘You were such a great student. Such a great friend. You dreamt of travelling the world, now you are travelling to heaven.’ Family friend and senior rabbi at Hendon United Synagogue in north-west London, Mordechai Ginsbury, told Sky News he was ‘devastated’.

‘To think that in a few moments, so senselessly and painfully, this has happened, such a tragic loss of life, of goodness, is just devastating,’ he said.

He added: ‘They were just a delightful family, full of commitment, vigour, passion, energy, and they did wonderful things for us in the community.’


British sisters Maia (left) and Rina (right) were murdered in a West Bank drive-by shooting on Friday

Rabbi Leo Dee, 51, (pictured) the father of two British sisters who were murdered in a drive-by shooting in the West Bank on Friday broke down in tears as he paid tribute to his ‘beautiful angels’ at their funeral on Sunday 

 Friends and family members of Maia and Rina Dee, Israeli-British sisters killed in a shooting attack, mourn during their funerals at a cemetery in Kfar Etzion in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on Sunday

An aerial view shows friends and family of Maia and Rina Dee gathering for their funeral in Kfar Etzion on Sunday

Many of those who attended the funeral on Sunday were teenagers – including some of Rina’s school friends

Songs of grief filled the cemetery as mourners gathered to pay their respects to the ‘much loved’ British sisters on Sunday

Mourners react during the funeral of British-Israeli sisters Rina and Maya Dee in the West Bank on Sunday 

Mourners react during the funeral of British-Israeli sisters Rina and Maya Dee at the Kfar Etzion settlement cemetery in the occupied West Bank, on April 9

Relatives lean over the shrouded bodies of the dead sisters in grief at their funeral on Easter Sunday 

Heartbreaking pictures from Sunday funeral service showed mourners screaming out in pain and embracing one another as they try to process the shock death of the sisters which came amid soaring Israeli-Palestinian tensions.

The car that the victims were travelling in crashed after coming under fire, before the gunmen continued to shoot at close range. 

Rabbi Dee, who gathered with relatives at the front of the prayer hall next to a low podium, moved to Israel from London with his family nine years ago and had been living in the West Bank settlement of Efrat. 

Mr Dee was formerly a senior rabbi at the Radlett United Synagogue in Hertfordshire and before that he was an assistant rabbi in Hendon, north London.

Mordechai Ginsbury, senior rabbi at Hendon United Synagogue, who is still in touch with the family said he was feeling ‘absolute devastation, pain, grief and shock’.

Speaking to Sky News, he said: ‘To think that in a few moments, so senselessly and painfully, this has happened, such a tragic loss of life, of goodness, is just devastating.’ 

Britain’s Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis (pictured) paid tribute to his two ‘much loved’ daughters who were killed on Friday

Sir Ephraim Mirvis said that ‘no words can describe the depth of our shock and sadness at the heart-breaking news’ following 

Distraught mourners attend Sunday’s funeral of the two British-Israeli sisters who were shot dead in an attack on Friday

Rabbi Ginsbury said he spoke to Rabbi Dee on Sunday night, where the father and husband admitted that ‘one of the things that is sustaining him is the blanket of warmth and love which is enveloping them within Israel and around the world’.  

Last night, Britain’s Chief Rabbi has paid tribute to the two ‘much loved’ sisters, adding ‘no words can describe the depth of our shock and sadness at the heart-breaking news’. 

Paying tribute to the sisters on Twitter, Chief Rabbi Mervis said: ‘No words can describe the depth of our shock and sadness at the heart-breaking news of the murder by terrorists in Israel of Maya & Rina Dee, daughters of Rebbetzen Lucy, who is in a critical condition & Rabbi Leo Dee, my dear colleagues.

READ MORE: ‘We will strike our enemies and they will pay’: Israel pounds Gaza and Lebanon after Netanyahu vowed ‘aggressive response’ to rocket attacks by Palestinian militants – as fresh violence breaks out at Islam holy site

 

‘They were much loved in the Hendon and Radlett communities in the UK as well as in Israel, and well beyond. We pray for a refuah shelema for Rebbetzen Lucy and also for those injured in the terrorist attack yesterday on the promenade in Tel Aviv.’

Mr Dee, who quit his job as a City investment banker to become a rabbi, believes that the killers will be ‘brought to justice’.

He previously revealed that he traced the car down with a tracking device, where he saw his wife being airlifted to hospital but his daughters were already dead. 

Speaking from his wife’s hospital bedside, Rabbi Dee told The Mail on Sunday that he was travelling with other family members in a car some distance ahead when a relative called to ask if he knew ‘about the shooting and if the family was OK’.

‘I said everyone was fine, but when I called my wife and two daughters there was no answer.’

In panic, he turned on a Google tracking device which allows parents to follow their children’s mobile phones. It led him to the Hamra settlement, 30 miles north of Jerusalem.

London-born Rabbi Dee said: ‘My daughters were friends of each other as well as sisters. Now we are diminished. Maya was doing national service in the south, and was passionate about helping others. Rina is what you would call an A* pupil. We were proud of them.

He added: ‘I don’t blame the terrorists as they will be brought to justice. I am more worried about the tensions between Jews in Israel. Some people think that the new religious government will suppress minority rights and become totalitarian. But this is not a risk as Judaism is about balancing love and justice.’

The Dee family left Britain in 2014, having returned there from Israel in 2008. They then moved back to Jerusalem, where Rabbi Dee is a highly respected author and academic. 

On leaving the Radlett United Synagogue in Hertfordshire he said: ‘It has been a tremendous honour for Lucy and I to have lived in this warm and friendly community. We will cherish this period of our lives.’

Israeli forces gather near the Hamra junction in the northern part of the Jordan valley in the occupied West Bank following the shooting

Israeli medics and policemen check a damaged car at the scene of a shooting attack 

Cars line up next to the Hamra junction, in the northern part of the Jordan valley in the occupied West Bank after the April 7 attack 

Friends described the sisters as ‘beautiful, kind and happy young women’. 

Rabbi Dee said he had lived in Israel prior to returning to Britain in 2008, but the family had missed it ‘intensely’ and decided to return. 

‘We love the Jewish state, the huge array of Jewish learning institutions, the fact that the buses stop on Shabbat, the ability to buy kosher food at any supermarket and a culture that is fully in tune with our own,’ he added.

READ MORE: British holidaymakers are confirmed wounded in Tel Aviv terror attack when driver ploughed into pedestrians after father watched his two British daughters get shot dead in front of him in separate horror 

 

In London, the Foreign Office confirmed the deaths of the two sisters and appealed for all sides in the Israel-Palestine dispute to de-escalate a situation which has seen violence flare up in recent days.

Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said: ‘I am shocked by reports of the killing of two British sisters in an appalling and cowardly attack in the West Bank.

‘My thoughts are with their family and loved ones. More civilian victims of this cycle of violence show the urgent need for diplomatic efforts to de-escalate.’

The attack came amid escalating violence between Palestinians and Israeli factions in response to clashes at the Al-Aqsa mosque in East Jerusalem earlier this week.

The Israeli military initially reported that the Hamra shooting was caused by a collision between Israeli and Palestinian drivers.

Troops then said that they had found bullet holes in the Israeli vehicle and deemed it a deliberate attack.

Kan, an Israeli public broadcaster, said that 22 bullet casings were found. 

In response, Israel Police commissioner Kobi Shabtai called on all Israelis with firearms licences to start carrying their weapons.

Israeli Major General Yehuda Fuchs said they were reinforcing in all sectors and would find those responsible.

Soon after the attack, a car in Tel Aviv mounted the pavement and drove into pedestrians, killing one and injuring several.

Security measures were again ramped up in response. The Times of Israel reported that the IDF was planning to bolster the police forces as police prepared for unrest at Al-Aqsa. 

An unspecified number of air force reservists including fighter pilots and drone operators were also called up yesterday. 

A car in Tel Aviv overturned after driving into pedestrians and losing control on Friday

One was killed and seven were injured in the attack which took place this evening in Israel

Rockets hit Bezet and Shlomi in the north of Israel on Thursday as regional violence worsens

The attacks on Friday followed on from the Israeli bombing of Gaza and Tyre on Thursday night as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised an ‘aggressive response’ to rockets fired from Lebanon into northern Israel that afternoon. 

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the rocket attack, but an IDF spokesperson blamed Hamas, the de facto governing authority of the Gaza Strip.

The barrage, in turn, followed Israeli police storming the holy Al-Aqsa mosque compound with tear gas and stun grenades on Wednesday morning.

Violent scenes showed police using weapons to beat worshippers barricaded in the mosque, who retaliated by shooting fireworks and throwing stones.

The Israeli bombing of Gaza reportedly damaged a children’s hospital, further fomenting tensions ahead of the two outbursts on Friday.

Al-Araby al-Jadeed reported yesterday that in response to the attacks Israeli forces had ‘closed all entrances to Jericho with military checkpoints, and are searching all vehicles’ to find those responsible for the shooting in Hamra.

The outlet, founded by a former Israeli MP, cited local sources claiming that settlers under protection of the Israeli army were pursuing revenge attacks, ‘burning houses and farm machinery’ in Faroush and ‘beginning to mount further attacks on local residents’.

Hamas did not claim responsibility for the attack but said it was a ‘natural response to [Israel’s] ongoing crimes against the Al-Aqsa mosque and its barbaric aggression against Lebanon and the steadfast Gaza.’

Fire and smoke rise following an Israeli airstrike in central Gaza Strip, Friday, April 7, 2023

The Israeli military struck targets in the Gaza Strip, pushing the region toward a wider conflagration after a day of rocket fire along the country’s northern and southern borders

Palestinian mourners carry the body of 20-year-old Ayed Azzam, who was reportedly shot dead by Israeli forces on Saturday  

The IDF have stressed Israeli warplanes targeted infrastructure belonging to Palestinian armed groups, as opposed to civilian infrastructure.

Hamas targets in the city of Tyre in the south of Lebanon were also hit in the assault.

There were no reports of serious casualties, but residents in Qalili, Lebanon, were injured in the bombardment.

The Palestinian health ministry said ‘partial damage’ was done to the Al-Dorra children’s hospital in Gaza City during the strikes.

Hecht said the IDF was aware of the allegation and was looking into it as the local UN forces urged restraint. 

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