Widow of Holocaust survivor killed in Bondi attack slams Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

The widow of genocide survivor Alex Kleytman, who was killed in the Bondi Beach terror attack, has said she does not want to hear from the prime minister.
Larisa and Alex Kleytman were attending Hanukkah celebrations by the Sea on December 14 when they began hearing gunshots.
Ms Kleytman told Nine when the horror began that the two tried to hide but Granny couldn’t lie flat so she pushed her head under a chair.
A few minutes later he heard her scream and realized he had been shot.
Larissa believes her husband protected her from the bullets that killed her and 14 other innocent people.
Following the tragedy, Ms Kleytman said she was “devastated” but supported by community members.
King III. He received a personal letter from Charles, saying that he, too, was shocked by the support from strangers.
However, he says he has not heard from Anthony Albanese.
“I don’t want it, I don’t trust it,” she said on A Current Affair.
“He explained how he does everything. He doesn’t do anything. He has to protect everyone, not just the Jews. He has to protect everyone.”

“People I’ve never seen in my life. They come, they just talk to me. They bring food, they bring everything.”
“We should feel free like everyone else,” he said.
Mr Albanese has recalled parliament for two days next week to introduce the new national security law.
The bill targets hate speech and gun laws in the wake of a terrorist attack.
“Of course, more could always have been done. Governments are not perfect. I am not perfect. We acted constructively,” Mr Albanese told a press conference last year.
“I am determined to make sure that we get through this as a nation, that we don’t let it define us or divide us,” he said.


