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A few months passed, Israeli officials said, before they noticed a dramatic increase in the number of graves. A pathway that city gardeners regularly used with their pickup truck was suddenly blocked by headstones, and a row of gravestones mysteriously appeared over an underground sewage line and on top of one manhole cover, according to Shlomo Chen, an inspector with the Israel Lands Authority in charge of the graveyard. By August, city crews began arriving at night to demolish the gravestones. Restored graves that the city deemed genuine were left untouched. "It is important to note that this is one of the biggest frauds perpetrated in recent years, and its sole goal was to illegally take over state land," the Jerusalem municipality said. The new gravestones, typically constructed with old stones set in fresh concrete, also scrambled the physical record at an important historical site, according to the Israel Antiquities Authority, which termed the graves "fictitious." The Islamic Movement's Abu Atta said all of the markers were constructed atop genuine graves, though in some cases nearly nothing was left of the original. He also indicated that the precise location of the graves was beside the point. "If you dig a few meters down anywhere here you'll find bones," he said. "We just want to guard the cemetery." The irony of a Jewish-sponsored Museum of Tolerance going up partly on a Muslim graveyard has made the project an irresistible target for critics. Legal action by the Islamic Movement and other groups snarled the project for years. The 2008 Supreme Court ruling in the museum's favor noted that in Israel, where there are more archaeological sites per square mile than in any other country in the world, buildings are often built on graves. And when the British ruled the city before 1948, it emerged, the local Islamic leaders at the time granted a religious dispensation to move graves in the cemetery to clear the way for a business center, hotel and park.
[Associated
Press;
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