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Opinion

The ugly face of Islamic State has surfaced again, but this time in Israel

Deadly attack in Bnei Brak means questions that should have been asked years ago are now being raised

March 31, 2022 11:28
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Members of the Zaka organization remove a body at the scene at the scene of a shooting attack in Bnei Brak, March 29, 2022. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** בני ברק פיגוע משטרה כוחות הצלה מדא זקא גופה הרוגים פצועים טרור מחבלים
6 min read

There are a lot of exceptional things about Bnei Brak. It is the largest Charedi city in the world. It is the most crowded local authority in Israel. And until Tuesday this week, it was one of the very few towns in Israel that had never known a deadly terror attack. You could see some of this in the way Bnei Brak residents treated the crime scene. Less than 24 hours after a Palestinian gunman had opened fire on a street corner, killing four passers-by, all the red police tapes had been torn away. On the pavement, rows of Neshama candles had been lit around a traditional bereavement notice with the names of the two neighbours who were killed, Rabbi Avishai Yehezkel and Yaakov Shalom. Friends of the two Ukrainians, Viktor Sorkfot and Dmitry Mitrik, who were killed when the gunman fired into the grocery where they worked, had put photographs of them up on the wall, but their names were absent. And there was no mention of the fifth victim, Sergeant Amir Khouri, one of the police team who had chased down the terrorist and shot him dead in a fierce firefight that left him mortally wounded.

“No-one here knows how to commemorate terror victims,” said one local resident. “This is not something anyone here expected.” Bnei Brakis believe that the power of the Torah, studied in a thousand yeshivas, seminaries, schools and cheders in their town, has protected them from harm over all these years. Even during the Gulf War in 1991, when Iraqi missiles rained down on the surrounding towns, Bnei Brak remained unscathed. Some said the attack could only have taken place after the death of Rabbi Chaim Kanyevsky, 11 days earlier: “His righteousness is no longer here to protect us.” But this was an unexpected terror attack in other ways as well.

Eye off the ball?
In early 2016, when the Islamic State was at its peak, the then-incoming head of Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security agency, Nadav Argaman, made the observation that “there are more Swedes in ISIS than Israelis.” At the time, it was seen as an intriguing insight. Of a million-and-a-half Muslim citizens in Israel, only a few dozen had been tempted to travel to Turkey and try to cross the border to join the Islamic State fighters in Syria.

“It sounded clever at the time,” said an Israeli intelligence veteran this week. “In retrospect, it was a mistake. We shouldn’t have just been counting the number of Israeli Daeshists, but also trying to measure the damage they could potentially cause in the future.”