- Source: Bab al-Rahma Cemetery
- Bab al-Rahma Cemetery
- Bab al-Asbat Cemetery
- Israeli razing of cemeteries and necroviolence against Palestinians
- Shaddad ibn Aws
- Bab al-Sahira Cemetery
- Sulayman Al-Taji Faruqi
- Timeline of the Israel–Hamas war (12 January – 6 May 2024)
- Golden Gate (Jerusalem)
- Tripoli, Lebanon
- Timeline of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2016
Bab al-Rahma cemetery is located along the eastern wall of Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. It extends from Bab Al-Asbat (Lions' Gate) to the end of the Al-Aqsa Mosque wall near the Umayyad palaces on the southern side. It has an area of about 23 acres. The Bab al-Rahma cemetery contains many graves of the Companions, most notably Ubadah ibn al-Samit and Shadad ibn Aus, and on the graves of Mujahideen who participated in the conquest of Jerusalem during the Omari and Ayyubid conquests. The road to Lions' Gate separates the cemetery in two, Bab al-Rahma Cemetery to the south and Al-Asbat Gate Cemetery to the North.
Since at least 2011, Palestinian sources assert that the Israeli government intends to convert part of the cemetery into a biblical garden. According to Israel's courts and Nature and Parks Authority, work near the cemetery is minor and no displacement of graves is allowed. Despite the restriction, burial activities continue with adding new graves on a regular basis, providing ongoing water contamination of the Gihon spring in the City of David.
References
External links
Media related to Bab al-Rahmah Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons