
IMAGE SOURCE, EPA Image caption, The funeral of the two sisters is taking place in the Israeli settlement of Kfar Etzion in the West Bank
The father of two British-Israeli sisters killed in a shooting in the occupied West Bank embraced their bodies while mourners sang songs of grief at their funeral on Sunday.
Maia and Rina Dee, 20 and 15, were killed on Friday when their car was attacked in the Jordan Valley.
Their funeral was held at a cemetery in the settlement of Kfar Etzion.
Their mother, Leah, remains in critical condition after surgery to remove bullets from her neck and spine.
Many at the funeral are teenagers – some from the school Rina went to. At the front, by a low podium, the family gathered, talking together and holding each other for long moments in silence.
They were embraced by their father, Rabbi Leo Dee, originally from London. He then sat back, his face contorted in pain, his hands reaching out to touch his remaining three children.

The family lives in the West Bank settlement of Efrat and moved from London nine years ago.
The car carrying the two sisters and their mother was driven off the road after being shot. The wider family was travelling in three cars for a holiday in Tiberias.
Israeli military personnel blocked roads in the area and said they had “started a pursuit of the terrorists” responsible. Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported that 22 bullet casings were found, apparently from a Kalashnikov assault rifle.
Speaking to the BBC on Saturday evening, Rabbi Dee described his daughters as beautiful, smart, and popular. He said he had not been able to sleep since their deaths.
He said Maia, who was volunteering for national service in a high school, was “wonderful, beautiful, had a lot of friends… she was very keen to do a second year of volunteering”.
Rina, he said, was “beautiful, fun, very smart, top grades in every subject, very popular with friends, sporty… very responsible, she would take responsibility for many things”.
“When it came to sweeping out the youth club floor, if other people didn’t turn up, she would be there by herself for three hours on a Friday morning, to make sure it was done,” he said.
Rabbi Dee heard the news of the attack without realizing his own family were involved, he said.
He called his wife and daughters, but they did not answer. He then saw a picture online of the car that was attacked.
He then drove to the scene. He was not allowed access but was handed his daughter’s ID card, which confirmed the worst.
Rabbi Dee has said he and his three remaining children “will get through this”.

Rabbi Mordechai Ginsbury, from the Hendon United Synagogue in north London, said he spoke briefly with his close friend Rabbi Dee before the funerals.
“Naturally, as are we all, [he was] devastated, shocked at how just in a few moments with an act of absolute evil and madness – insanity – things can change around,” he told the BBC.
“The loss of two gorgeous daughters, and his wife now lying critically ill in a hospital in Jerusalem.
“But through the sadness there’s still that determination that he has to find any positives one can find, to try and be strong for his remaining children.”
Rabbi Ginsburg added that Rabbi Dee felt “supported and embraced by a blanket of warmth and love” from within Israel and from people across the world who had contacted him.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who described the incident as a terror attack, sent his condolences to the family in a tweet naming the sisters on Saturday.
The UK’s chief rabbi, Sir Ephraim Mirvis, said that “no words can describe the depth of our shock and sadness at the heart-breaking news”.
After the two sisters were shot, Israel Police Commissioner Kobi Shabtai called on all Israelis with firearms licenses to start carrying their weapons.
Also on Friday, an Italian tourist was killed and seven other people were wounded, including three Britons, in a suspected car-ramming attack in Tel Aviv.