Israeli media reports said the families asked for their relatives' bodies to be released to them, and held a moment of silence to honor the "martyrs."
"Members of Knesset who go to comfort the families of terrorists who murdered Israelis do not deserve to be in the Israeli Knesset," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday. "I have asked the Speaker of the Knesset to examine what steps can be taken against them."
Meanwhile, some 154 Palestinians, the majority of whom Israel says were attackers, have been killed by Israeli forces.
The Arab lawmakers from the Joint List, an alliance of Arab-backed parties, met with the Palestinian families on Tuesday.
Among them was the father of a Palestinian who on Oct. 13, 2015 carried out one of the deadliest attacks in recent months, Israeli media reported.
Two Palestinian men boarded a bus in Jerusalem that day and began shooting and stabbing passengers, while another assailant rammed a car into a bus station before stabbing bystanders. Three Israelis were killed and several other people were wounded.
Israel has said it is holding the attackers' bodies due to security concerns. The issue has become a sore point with Palestinians. Posters of the dead are plastered on walls in east Jerusalem and the West Bank, and residents hold frequent demonstrations calling for the bodies' release.
About two dozen bodies were transferred to the Palestinians last month.
The three Arab lawmakers have angered mainstream Israelis before. Zoabi boycotted the playing of the national anthem when she was sworn into Israel's parliament.
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