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Leo Dee

Rabbi Leo Dee Dee, whose wife and two daughters were killed in a Palestinian terror attack, compared the current British premier to Neville Chamberlain.
“With praise and gratitude, we are excited to share the joyful news,” Rabbi Leo Dee from Efrat in Judea said.
The shooting that killed Rina, Maia and Lucy took place on the second day of Passover, and the anniversary of their terrorist murder will this year be observed on April 14.
The ruling is the result of a lawsuit initiated by Rabbi Leo Dee targeting Ramallah’s “pay for slay” financial reward system for terrorists and their families.
More than 5,000 children from the Judea city partook in writing the scroll’s 304,805 letters.
The events hall dedicated to Lucy Dee’s memory was filled to capacity on the first anniversary of her death, coinciding with the six-month anniversary of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre.
“This current worldwide campaign to support Israel will start most likely from a high school or university on the East Coast, possibly Manhattan. And you are the people who could do it,” he tells JNS.
“Tel Aviv must not become a dangerous place for the traditional religious and ultra-Orthodox public,” said Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Leo Dee’s wife Lucy, 48, and daughters Maia, 20, and Rina, 15, were murdered in a Palestinian terror attack on April 7.
Rabbi Leo Dee cut the ribbon at the ceremony for the state-of-the-art car in memory of terror victims Lucy, Maia and Rina.
The rabbi, who lost his wife and two teenage daughters in a Palestinian terror attack, has urged unity in the wake of the tragedy.
Israeli forces also mapped the Nablus home of the Palestinian terrorist who directed the killing in October of Staff Sgt. Ido Baruch.