The Mount of Olives in Jerusalem: Why Continued Israeli Control Is Vital
 
by  Nadav Shragai 
July 2009 
http://www.jcpa.org

- The Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives, that the Palestinians 
demand to transfer to their control, is the most important Jewish 
cemetery in the world. The area has constituted a religious and 
national pantheon for the Jewish people and the State of Israel, 
containing the tombs of the illustrious dead of the nation 
over the course of 3,000 years and serving as a site for Jewish 
gathering and prayer at the time of the ancient Temple and even 
prior to it.

- Under Jordanian rule, Jewish access and the continued burial of 
Jews on the mount was prohibited, despite Jordan's explicit 
commitment in the Israeli-Jordanian Armistice Agreement of 1949. 
During the period of Jordanian rule, the cemetery was destroyed 
and desecrated, and 38,000 of its tombstones and graves were 
smashed to smithereens.

- Since Jerusalem's reunification, burial ceremonies were renewed 
at the site and large sections of the cemetery were rehabilitated. 
Nevertheless, attempts by Palestinians to damage the cemetery 
have never totally abated, and there have been periodic attacks on 
Jewish mourners escorting their dead for burial.

- Previous Israeli governments that consented to discuss 
arrangements in Jerusalem with the Palestinians rejected their 
demand to transfer the Mount of Olives to PA sovereignty and 
control. Nevertheless, those governments were prepared to give 
their assent to the transfer of neighborhoods that control the 
access routes to the mount. Should any such agreement be 
implemented in the future, it could endanger freedom of access to 
the site and continued Jewish burial there.

- In any future arrangements, in order to allow continued Jewish 
burial on the mount, Israel must guarantee freedom of access to the 
site by controlling the arteries leading to it, as well as the areas 
adjacent to it. On the previous occasions that Israel transferred 
areas that included Jewish holy sites to Palestinian control, the 
Palestinians severely encumbered or refused to allow Jewish 
access to these places. Sometimes these sites were even severely 
damaged.

The Mount of Olives as a Jewish Site for Assembly and Prayer  

The Mount of Olives separates the Judean Desert to the east from 
the city of Jerusalem. The olive trees that covered the mount in the 
past are responsible for its name. An alternate name for the mount 
cited in the Talmud and the Midrash is the Mount of Anointment, 
named after the anointing oil, prepared from the olives that grew 
there, to anoint kings and high priests. 

Even before it became a Jewish cemetery, the Mount of Olives 
functioned as a place of prayer, even prior to the building of the 
Temple.(*1) King David would customarily prostrate himself there, 
and he earmarked the site for prayer. (*2 )

The Jewish commentaries relate that for three and a half years the 
Divine Presence dwelled on the Mount of Olives after having left 
from the site of the Temple Mount in the expectation that the 
Jewish people would do repentance. The prophets Zachariah and 
Ezekiel prophesied that from there it would make its return to its 
proper place at the Temple. (*3)

The Red Heifer ceremony was performed on the Mount of Olives. 
Ashes from the heifer were used to purify those defiled by contact 
with the dead during the Temple period and afterwards. A relay of 
bonfires that began from the Mount of Olives would inform the Jews 
of the Land of Israel as well as Jews residing in the diaspora that 
the new moon had been sanctified. After the Temple was 
destroyed, the Mount of Olives, which overlooked the Temple 
Mount and the site of the destroyed Temple, became a pilgrimage 
site and a venue for prayer and assembly, one that continued to 
function in that manner for many centuries.(*4) Jewish sources in 
particular note the pilgrimage to the Mount of Olives on the Festival 
of Tabernacles and on Hoshanna Raba (the seventh day of the Feast 
of Tabernacles), as well as on the Sabbath and weekdays.(*5) Jewish 
tradition holds that the dove that brought the olive branch to Noah at 
the end of the Flood came from the Mount of Anointment. (*6)

The Jewish Cemetery on the Mount of Olives  

The Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives is the largest and most 
important Jewish cemetery in the world, extending over 250 dunams 
east of the Temple Mount and constituting in effect a national and 
religious pantheon for the Jewish people containing the tombs of the 
illustrious dead of the nation over the course of 3,000 years. The 
greats of the Jewish people and the state are buried there, creators 
from all walks of life: rabbis and dynastic leaders, the prophets 
Haggai, Zachariah and Malachi, David's son Absalom, the 
commentator on the Mishnah Rabbi Obadiah of Bartanura, Rabbi 
Haim ben Atar (the Orah Hayyim), and Rabbi Shalom Sharabi (the 
Rashash). Others include Pinhas Rutenberg, the founder of the Israel 
Electric Company; fighters such as Yehiam Weitz; the authors 
Shmuel Yosef Agnon and Haim Hazaz; the renowned poet Uri Zvi 
Greenberg; Eliezer Ben Yehuda, the reviver of the Hebrew language; 
the rabbis of the Sadigora, Gur, and Nadborna hassidic dynasties; the 
founder of Hadassah, Henrietta Szold; intellectual giants such as 
Professor Ephraim Ohrbach; the revered Chief Rabbi Abraham 
HaCohen Kook; Menachem Begin, the sixth prime minister of Israel 
and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize; Moshe Yoel Salomon, one of 
Jerusalem's builders at the close of the nineteenth century and the 
founder of Petah Tikva; and myriads upon myriads of simple Jewish 
folk in the Yemenite, Bukharan, Georgian, Ashkenazi, Hassidic, 
Babylonian, and Jerusalem sections. All of them together constitute 
the historic backbone of the Jewish people. (*7) 

The Mount of Olives (which is also sanctified in Christian and Muslim 
traditions) is mentioned in the visions of the prophet Ezekiel and the 
prophecies of Zechariah, and has a special sanctity and qualities 
attributed to it that exempts those buried there on the day of the 
resurrection of the dead from the "separation of the soul at the grave" 
and "migration via underground passages." 

Jewish tradition relates that the beginning of the resurrection process 
will take place on the mount at the end of the days, as prophesied by 
the Jewish prophets. Many Jews believe that those buried on the 
mount will be the first to arise for everlasting life.8 The Jews of 
Jerusalem customarily sent soil from the Mount of Olives in bags to 
Jewish communities in the diaspora, and Jews outside of Israel would 
spread this soil on the graves of their beloved. 

There are twelve separate burial locations on the mount. The 
deceased were Jerusalem dwellers in particular, but also included 
those who resided outside the city and outside the boundaries of 
Israel who had requested to be buried there. 

The four major burial locations on the mount are: 

- The ancient Sephardic burial area where all the Jews of Jerusalem 
from all the communities were buried beginning from the fourteenth 
century until 1856. After this date only Jews from Oriental 
communities were buried there. Nearly all the Jewish luminaries of 
Jerusalem from the Oriental communities who lived and worked in the 
city until the War of Independence in 1948 are buried in these plots.

- Most Ashkenazi Jews were interred in the cemetery of the main 
General Burial Society founded by the Perushim (the opponents of 
Hasidism) beginning in 1856 and until the War of Independence, and 
they included even those who were not Perushim. Following the Six-
Day War, many others were buried there including Menachem Begin 
and his wife Aliza.

- The cemetery of the Hasidim includes the burial plots of a number of 
Hasidic burial societies. Burial at this cemetery began in 1856 and 
continued until the War of Independence. All the deceased buried 
there were members of Jerusalem's Hasidic courts and include a few 
dynastic rabbis.

- Nearly 5,000 deceased, the majority from Jerusalem, were buried at 
a section of the cemetery of the General Burial Society during the 
years 1939-1948.

Aside from the four major burial areas that cover most of the area of 
the Mount of Olives, there are eight additional minor burial areas that 
belong generally to the Oriental community. 

Jewish burial on the Mount of Olives began when Jerusalem was 
transformed into the Jewish people's capital during the time of King 
David (circa 1,000 BCE). 

The most ancient burial caves on the Mount of Olives are in the area 
of the contemporary Arab village of Silwan, and date from biblical 
times. The Carta Guide to the Mount of Olives relates that burial on 
the eastern ridge gathered impetus at the end of the First Temple 
period (the eighth to sixth centuries BCE), continued during the entire 
period of the Second Temple, and then expanded and reached Mount 
Scopus as well. At the close of the Second Temple period (circa 70 
CE), the eastern ridge in the middle of the Mount of Olives became a 
giant burial ground with many burial caves scattered around the 
gardens and the olive orchards. However, out of the myriads of burial 
caves dating from that period, only a few survived. Most of them were 
plundered. 

Historical sources relate that during the Arab, Crusader, and 
Mameluke periods, Jewish burial took place on the southern slopes 
and east of the Temple Mount. However, in the sixteenth century, with 
the beginning of Ottoman rule, the Jews returned to bury their dead on 
parts of the Mount of Olives. (*9)

The Mount of Olives under Jordanian Rule 

On the eve of Israel's War of Independence in 1948 there were about 
60,000 graves on the Mount of Olives. When hostilities were initiated 
by the Arabs against the Jewish community, the Jews risked their 
lives to continue to bury their dead on the mount. However, when the 
violence intensified they were forced to prepare "temporary" 
cemeteries in the western part of the city.(*10)

Jordan had obligated itself within the framework of the Armistice 
Agreement that it had signed with Israel on April 3, 1949, to allow 
"free access to the holy sites and cultural institutions and use of the 
cemeteries on the Mount of Olives," (*11) but did not honor its 
obligation. (*12)

At the end of 1949, Israeli lookouts posted on Mount Zion reported 
that Arab residents began uprooting the tombstones and plowing the 
land in the cemeteries.(*13) The destruction of the cemeteries 
continued over the course of the 19 years that the Jordanians ruled 
eastern Jerusalem. Four roads were paved through the cemeteries,
(*14) in the process destroying graves including those of famous 
persons. Skeletons and bones were strewn about and scattered.
(*15) Tombstones were used as paving stones for roads in the 
Jordanian Army camp in Azariya, east of Jerusalem. In Azariya a 
telephone booth was found built out of tombstones, and Jewish 
tombstones were also used as flooring for latrines. Uprooted 
tombstones were also used in Jordanian military positions 
surrounding the city. Both the newer sections and ancient graves 
were destroyed, some a thousand years old. 

A gas station and other buildings, including the Intercontinental Hotel, 
were erected on top of ancient graves. Israel attempted to focus global 
attention and alert international institutions to the destruction that was 
being perpetrated, but to no avail. In 1954 Israel protested to the 
United Nations over the destruction of graves and the plowing up of 
the area. In 1956, the Jordanians attempted to pave a new road 
through the cemeteries, Israel complained, and the work was halted. 
In July 1963, Israeli lookout posts again reported that Jordanian 
soldiers were destroying the tombstones. After the site was liberated 
in 1967, about 38,000 smashed or damaged tombstones were 
counted. (*16) The slow rehabilitation of the mount and the 
tombstones has continued until this very day, and Jewish burial at the 
site was renewed.(*17)

The Period of Israeli Rule 

The renewed Jewish presence on the Mount of Olives guaranteed the 
restoration of orderly burial at the site. Nevertheless, Arab damage to 
Jewish tombstones and attacks on Jewish mourners has continued. 
Occasionally, when Israel relaxed its vigilance over the mount and the 
access routes to it in the belief that the area was quiet, Arab violence 
resumed.(*18) In periods of increased tension, especially during the 
first and second intifadas, more offenses of this type were recorded.
(*19) 

In December 1975 a number of tombstones were smashed in the 
section belonging to the Sephardic Community Committee on the 
Mount of Olives. (*20) In March 1976, 14 tombstones in the North 
African immigrants (Mughrabi) section were totally destroyed.
(*21) In 1977, tombstones were shattered in the Tzur section opposite 
the Panorama Hotel (*22) and the grave of the rabbi of the Gura 
dynasty was desecrated. (*23) In August 1978 a small explosive 
charge went off near the Intercontinental Hotel next to the Jewish 
cemetery. (*24) In May 1979 the Jerusalem Cemetery Council 
reported a series of complaints by relatives of the deceased on the 
desecration of graves and the displacement of tombstones on the 
Mount of Olives. (*25)

During the course of the first intifada, the Mount of Olives became a 
focal point for the desecration of Jewish graves. In his book The War 
of the Holy Places, attorney Dr. Samuel Berkowitz recounted some of 
the incidents. (*26) In February 1988 the Yemenite section was 
desecrated and many tombstones were smashed. In May and July 
1989 and June 1991, about ten large PLO flags were drawn on the 
support walls of the cemetery. In May 1990, 13 tombstones were 
shattered in the Sephardic section and crosses and hate inscriptions 
were drawn. In June 1990, 68 tombstones in the "Kolel Polin" section 
and 11 tombstones in the American section of the cemetery were 
smashed with heavy hammers. A year later about forty additional 
tombstones were found shattered in the Sephardic section on the 
Mount of Olives. On October 6, 1992, on the eve of Yom Kippur, 25 
graves were desecrated at the burial site where Prime Minister 
Menachem Begin was buried, and nationalist slogans in Arabic were 
spray-painted. 

Scores of additional incidents of this type have occurred in recent 
years as well. Often, the perpetrators were apprehended: bands of 
Palestinian youths (sometimes also adults) whose actions were 
motivated by nationalist and/or religious fervor. Yet these events did 
not come close to the massive and systematic desecration of 
tombstones during the period of Jordanian rule. 

In the period of Israeli rule, Jewish burial parties have made their way 
to the mount daily, and in most cases without incident. Jews visit the 
graves of their beloved on the mount on a daily basis and the police 
have provided improved security. (*27)

Extensive rehabilitation work has been performed on the mount. 
Access and parking have been arranged; passageways, paths, and 
observation points were built. Fences and thousands of graves were 
rehabilitated. Public toilets were installed and a promenade was 
erected on the top of the mount. During the nighttime hours, the view 
from the mount provides one of Jerusalem's most spectacular 
attractions as nearly 202 dunams are illuminated with special lighting. 
The churches of Dominus Flevit, Mary Magdalene, and the Church of 
All Nations - on the path of Jesus, and at the foot of the mount the 
ancient tombs of the (prophet) Zachariah, the sons' of Hezir (the High 
Priests at the close of the Second Temple period), and Absalom (the 
son of King David), have also received the emphasis that they 
deserve. (*28)

The Mount of Olives in Negotiations between Israel and the 
Palestinians 

During the course of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians 
at the Camp David summit in 2000, President Bill Clinton broached an 
outline for partitioning Jerusalem based on the principle: "What is 
Jewish to the Jews, what is Palestinian to the Palestinians." Israel 
was prepared to adopt this outline, but with reservations. (*29) 
During the negotiations, the Palestinians demanded sovereignty not 
only over the Arab neighborhoods in eastern Jerusalem, but also over 
additional territory including the Jewish cemetery on the Mount of 
Olives. Israel rejected this demand and insisted on sovereignty and 
Israeli security on the mount and on the roads leading to it. In the 
Taba discussions as well, Israel and the Palestinians stuck to their 
respective positions. 

During the Olmert-Livni government (2006-2009), there were 
discussions with the Palestinians on a special regime in the "Holy 
Basin," which was defined as the Old City of Jerusalem and additional 
areas such as Mount Zion and the Mount of Olives. As far as is 
known, the sides didn't enter into the substance of the special regime, 
although, according to sources close to the negotiating team, Israel 
did not propose and did not intend to propose any Palestinian control 
whatsoever on the Mount of Olives. 

Despite Israeli insistence on continued sovereignty and security 
control on the Mount of Olives and the roads leading to it, Israel 
agreed, both at Camp David as well as Taba, to Palestinian 
sovereignty and control in areas adjacent to and controlling the Mount 
of Olives including parts of the neighborhoods of A-Tur, Ras Al-Amud, 
Silwan, and parts of the Old City. 

A different position was manifested by the Israeli side in the 
framework of the Geneva Initiative, a plan lacking binding legal force 
that was discussed between senior Palestinian personages and 
members of the Labor Party and the Israeli left. According to the plan, 
the Mount of Olives was to be under Palestinian sovereignty, but 
Israel would operate the site and retain security responsibility over the 
mount. Freedom of access to the mount would be preserved by 
organized transport from the Jewish Quarter or the Western Wall 
Plaza in the Old City. Israeli security would be provided but would not 
fly a flag while entering the Mount of Olives compound. This 
arrangement was part of a series of special arrangements that the 
Geneva Initiative prescribed for the holy places. The initiative also 
prescribed in reciprocity that the Christian cemetery on Mount Zion 
would be under Israeli sovereignty, and that Palestinian transport 
would arrive there as well, with the cemetery to be under Palestinian 
management, control, and operation. (*30)

Jewish Settlement in the Mount of Olives Region (*31)

In May 1999, work commenced on the construction of a small Jewish 
neighborhood of 132 housing units at the edge of the Ras Al-Amud 
neighborhood in an area adjacent to the "Hatzur" section of the 
Sephardic cemetery on the Mount of Olives. 51 Jewish families are 
living today at the location, called "Maale Hazeitim." The land on 
which the neighborhood was built was purchased 20 years ago by the 
Jewish magnate Irwin Moscowitz, who purchased it from two rabbinic 
colleges that had purchased the land at the location over a hundred 
years ago. The British authorities had prohibited annexing this land to 
the Mount of Olives for burial purposes due to its proximity to the 
main thoroughfare, and thus the area remained vacant of graves. In 
the future, the entrepreneurs are planning to expand and join the 
neighborhood to another adjacent area that is under Jewish control. 

The establishment of the neighborhood was accompanied by a stormy 
political debate between Israel and the Palestinians and the United 
States. The argument voiced against Israel was that this was a 
provocation and it would create a perpetual source of friction. The 
Israeli government postponed the granting of permits for building the 
neighborhood for many months, but when the internal political timing 
in Israel was deemed suitable (following the fall of the first Netanyahu 
government), building commenced. 

The result after nearly a decade is one of prolonged quiet, without 
friction. The Jews and Palestinians coexist side-by-side, without 
friction, but also without cooperation. It is noteworthy that 
construction at the site was supported by the Cemetery Council and a 
number of burial societies that are active in Jerusalem. The Cemetery 
Council submitted an opinion to the urban planning council noting that 
"the erection of the neighborhood would induce many whose beloved 
are buried on the Mount of Olives to come visit the graves of their 
beloved, something that is denied them from time to time due to 
security considerations, while the building of a neighborhood would 
produce a result that many people who currently were not prepared to 
bury their dead on the Mount of Olives due to similar apprehension, 
would change their positions. (*32)

The Attitude of the Palestinians and the Palestinian Authority to 
Jewish Holy Sites within or Adjacent to Their Territory (*33)

The performance of the Palestinian Authority and the Palestinians in 
everything connected to respecting and preserving the Jewish holy 
places within or adjacent to their territory has been poor. In 
September 2000, the Western Wall was targeted by a Palestinian 
mob that threw stones from the Temple Mount above, in the presence 
of religious officials and security personnel from the Palestinian 
Authority. Israel had allowed their presence at the site in the hope 
that this would help calm the situation and control it. At the same 
time, Joseph's Tomb in Nablus came under a constant hail of gunfire 
and finally was plundered and burned by a Palestinian mob after it 
was evacuated by Israel on October 7, 2000. Rachel's Tomb at the 
edge of Bethlehem was also attacked and had to be defended and 
fortified. The ancient "Peace Unto Israel" Synagogue in Jericho was 
plundered, and holy books and religious artifacts were set ablaze. 

The Oslo agreements stipulated that the Palestinian Authority would 
guarantee freedom of access to all Jewish holy sites and would 
protect them. In the Second Oslo Agreement signed on September 
28, 1995, 28 sites were defined as having "religious significance" or 
as "archaeological sites," and it addressed the status of 23 Jewish 
holy places including the tombs of biblical figures, remnants of 
ancient synagogues, and ancient graveyards. The Palestinians 
undertook to guarantee freedom of access to these places. In 
practice, the Palestinians severely hampered or prevented access to 
these sites. 

Reality as manifested in the West Bank since the Oslo Accords has 
demonstrated that one cannot entrust responsibility for Jewish holy 
places, or the access roads to the regions adjacent to them, to 
Palestinian hands. It is preferable to leave such responsibility in Israeli 
hands. 

Conclusions 

The importance and centrality of the Mount of Olives as the most 
important Jewish cemetery in the world and a focal point of a three 
thousand-year-old Jewish tradition makes it incumbent to leave the 
site under full Israeli sovereignty and responsibility, especially as we 
are dealing with an active cemetery, where burial has not ceased. 

The fact that under Jordanian rule, the obligation to provide free Jewish 
access to this major site was not honored, and in the course of that 
same period the cemetery was severely damaged and desecrated, 
should suffice to prevent a similar attempt in our era. It is only thanks 
to Israeli efforts that damage to the cemetery has declined 
appreciably. Continued attempts by Palestinians to harm funeral 
processions on the way to the mount inform us that Palestinian 
motivation to harm Jews and their holy places in this area still exists. 
Without the efforts of the Israel Police and the Israel Security Agency, 
the picture would be far worse. 

The transfer of neighborhoods adjacent to the Mount of Olives to 
Palestinian sovereignty and control (A-Tur, Ras Al-Amud, and part of 
Silwan) would endanger the free access of the Jewish public to this 
ancient holy site. Even defining the location as part of the "Holy 
Basin," as was done in the course of earlier negotiations, jeopardizes 
Jewish freedom of access to the site, as well as continued burial 
there, as long as it is not made clear that the State of Israel will enjoy 
authority there in all that concerns security, management of burial 
procedures, and access to the mount. 

*     *     * 

Notes 

1. A research study by Dr. Aryeh Kimelman who studied the history 
of Jerusalem and the Temple (prayers and circling the Mount of 
Olives), unpublished manuscript; Zeev Vilnai, The Old City of 
Jerusalem and its Surroundings, vol. 2, (Ahiezer Publishers, 1972), 
pp. 314-316. 

2. Kimelman. See also Samuel II XV, 32, with commentaries. 

3. Zachariah, XIV, 4; Ezekiel XLIII:2. 

4. Kimelman cites scores of sources that attest to this including: 
Sefer Hayishuv, booklet 2. Katedrae, booklet 8, pages 131, 134, etc. 

5. Kimelman. 

6. Breishit Raba, XXXIII:11. 

7. The historical survey regarding the Jewish cemetery on the Mount 
of Olives is based upon the Carta Guide to the Mount of Olives. A 
Journey through Jewish Cemeteries, 1999, as well as Nadav Shragai, 
"The Grave of Menachem Begin May Pass to the Palestinian 
Authority," Ha'aretz, December 26, 2000. See also Vilnai, op. cit., pp. 
314-372. 

8. Vilnai, including the sources upon which he relies. 

9. For details, see The Carta Guide to the Mount of Olives, pp. 10-14. 

10. Miron Benvenisti, Opposite the Closed Wall (Weidenfeld and 
Nicholson, 1973), pp. 78-79. 

11. Shmuel Berkowitz, The Wars of the Holy Places (Jerusalem 
Institute for Israel Studies and Hed Artzi, 2000), p. 52. 

12. Benvenisti, op. cit., p. 81. 

13. Ibid., p. 78. 

14. Shmuel Berkowitz, How Terrible Is this Place (Carta, 2006), p. 19. 

15. The description of the destruction of the cemetery during the 
Jordanian period is taken from the booklet Sacrilege - How the 
Synagogues and Cemeteries Were Desecrated, published in October 
1967 by the Israel Ministry of Religious Affairs, accompanied by 
photos documenting the destruction. However, the description 
appears in more recent sources as well as in contemporary 
newspapers. 

16. Benvenisti, op. cit., pp. 78-79; See also Berkowitz, How Terrible, 
p. 19. 

17. The desecration of Jewish graves on the mount and the theft of 
tombstones took place in previous generations as well. Rabbi 
Benjamin of Tudela who toured Jerusalem circa 1173 attests to this 
and also wrote in a letter dispatched from Jerusalem that the 
Jerusalem rabbis were complaining about the Arab "lords of the land" 
who were wreaking havoc with the graves. Testimonies about similar 
actions in various periods are plentiful. 

18. From the reports by the author in Ha'aretz over the years in his 
capacity as Jerusalem Affairs correspondent and on the basis of talks 
that he conducted with security figures. 

19. Ibid. 

20. "Tombstones Were Smashed on the Mount of Olives," Ha'aretz, 
December 22, 1975. 

21. "Tombstones Were Desecrated on the Mount of Olives," Ha'aretz, 
March 26, 1976. 

22. "Tombstones Were Desecrated on the Mount of Olives," Ha'aretz, 
November 29, 1977. 

23. "Unknown Person Damaged the Grave of the Rabbi of Gura on the 
Mount of Olives," Ha'aretz, September 28, 1977. 

24. "An Explosive Charge Detonated on the Mount of Olives," 
Ha'aretz, August 13, 1978. 

25. "A Complaint on the Desecration of Graves and the Destruction of 
Tombstones on the Mount of Olives," Ha'aretz, May 15, 1979. 

26. Berkowitz, p. 7. 

27. Police sources. 

28. From a survey by Amnon Lorch, the former director general of the 
East Jerusalem Development Corporation, in the Carta Guide to the 
Mount of Olives, p. 7. 

29. Journalist reports from the period supplemented by personal 
access to the relevant materials that I enjoyed within the purview of 
my work as a journalist at Ha'aretz during the relevant period. 

30. Details on the Geneva Initiative agreements were provided to me 
by Dr. Menachem Klein, who was involved in the talks from the Israeli 
side, and they also appear in the formal text of the agreement. 

31. The details about Jewish settlement on the Mount of Olives are 
taken from the daily Israeli press and especially from Ha'aretz, as I 
covered this story on its behalf for a few years, as well as 
conversations with the local settlers, police officers, and ministers 
who were serving in the government at the time. Shmuel Berkowitz 
sums up the affair in his book The Wars of the Holy Places, pp. 193-
195. 

32. Nadav Shragai "‘Hevra Kadisha' a Jewish Neighborhood of Ras Al
-Amud Will Facilitate More Secure Access to the Mount of Olives," 
Ha'aretz, September 28, 1993. 

33. For details on this issue, see Nadav Shragai, Jerusalem: The 
Danger of Partition (Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, 2008), pp. 40
-48, as well as the sources on which it is based. See also Nadav 
Shragai, "The Palestinian Authority and the Jewish Holy Sites in the 
West Bank - Rachel's Tomb as a Test Case," Jerusalem Center for 
Public Affairs, December 2007. See also Berkowitz, The Wars, pp. 
215-223. 
-----------------------------
Nadav Shragai is the author of Jerusalem: The Dangers of Division - 
An Alternative to Separation from the Arab Neighborhoods (Jerusalem 
Center for Public Affairs, 2008); At the Crossroads, the Story of the 
Tomb of Rachel (Jerusalem Studies, 2005); and The Mount of 
Contention, the Struggle for the Temple Mount, Jews and Muslims, 
Religion and Politics since 1967 (Keter, 1995). He has been writing for 
the Israeli daily newspaper Ha'aretz since 1983.