Father of Halamish widow speaks about his daughter, his country, and his grandchildren's future.

Speaking with Arutz Sheva, father of the widowed Michal Salomon Dan Landau said his daughter responded bravely in a situation which would "paralyze even trained commandos."

Salomon's husband, his sister, and their father were murdered barbarically in Friday's Neve Tzuf (Halamish) massacre. Their mother, Tova Salomon, was injured.

"Her story is really inspirational," Landau said. "It's the story of a woman who in order to protect her children behaved bravely with an amazing response to a situation that I think would paralyze even trained commando soldiers. You have to see the picture."

"She was sitting in her dining room, prepared for a celebration, and everything was calm and leisurely. All of a sudden, in a split second, she realized she and her children are in danger and in a split second, she made the right decisions - and without any hesitation, she rescued her children."

When asked what the murder taught him about the people of Israel, Landau responded, "I think that we are united. Sometimes we quarrel, sometimes we have differences of opinion, but basically we are united."

"You saw people who belong to the right wing, who are quite extreme left-wing, here today - they all came, sat with the family, listened to the story, sympathized, it's amazing.

"Yesterday...a lady told me, 'You're Mr. Landau?' I said 'yes,' she said 'G-d bless you,' cried, and hung up the telephone.

"When people call me, the first thing they say is, 'I don't know what to tell you.' And I say, 'You don't have to speak.' Words are meaningless now, don't look for words. The fact that you came to speak to me, that you hugged me, that you called me - I feel the emotions streaming from one heart to another heart, and we don't need words."

Regarding how his grandchildren - Elad's orphans - are faring, Landau was more sober.

"The children have undergone a major trauma and we still don't know exactly...the depth of the trauma," he said.

One of the children "speaks about his experience...about the fact that he saw his aunt being stabbed and he heard the screams of his father being stabbed."

"He was in a dark room," Landau explained, emphasizing the child's "fear that the terrorist would come to the room to finish his dirty job."

"They have to be treated. They will be treated by professionals, and as I said, at this moment, they have many friends around them... After the shiva (week of mourning), they will have to begin their regular life again and it will be a long long road to healing and rebuilding the family."