It's just gone 7.30pm - and outside a synagogue in north Manchester, we've heard the shofar, a ceremonial horn, being blown to mark the end of the long day of prayers.
The streets, which had been so quiet all day, fill with people and families.
We're just minutes away from where the attack took place.
But people haven't had their phones on in synagogue - and we find ourselves in the slightly surreal position of having to tell people what happened to members of their community, just a few roads away.
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Image: Rachel gasped as she heard the news
"Did many people get hurt?" Rachel, in her 70s, asks me.
I tell her two have died.
She gasps and says: "My gosh. It's the holiest day of the year.
"Very, very frightening. We're not s