Guy Jacob Cafrey

Guy leaves behind his parents, Bertha and Igal, his sister Karen, 43, a nephew and a niece.

Guy worked as a mini-bus driver, transporting disabled children to schools and day care centers. On the day of the attack, he took his bus to the mechanic for service. While he was waiting for the repairs, a terrorist opened fire on him at random, hitting him with three bullets in the neck and chest.

The gunman, who fired the gun from a bag to conceal his weapon, had already shot one other person in a different location, took a cab to the Halissa district of Haifa and opened fire on Guy. Guy’s father had spoken to him on the phone just minutes before the attack took place.

“Work meant everything to him,” his mother Bertha said. “It was crucial to him to get the children on time.”

She noted that he had a positive influence on the children. “During one ride, he told one of the children that he was a ‘champion’ to make him feel good. The boy came home and told his mother that Guy told him he was a champion.”

Guy was born in London but moved to Israel at the age of four. Before he worked as a mini-bus driver, he was a computer technician. Guy did his military service in the Artillery Corps and spent most of his three years in Gaza and Lebanon.

May his memory be blessed.