World Tolerance Obstacle The Museum of Tolerance site in downtown Jerusalem. Wiesenthal Center faces challenges over building museum in Israel. site in the seventh century. In response, the High Court has appointed former Chief Justice Meir Shamgar as a mediator. Shamgar has a month to find a resolution on the topic. Muslims aren't the only ones opposing the project — the build- ing plan is also unpopular among many Israeli Jews. After years of bureaucratic wrangling and vocal opposition from influential Jerusalemites, the road seemed finally clear last May, when a gala ceremony marked the groundbreaking on the three-acre campus. Ready were architect Frank Gehry's plans for seven buildings, including two museums, a library, education center, per- forming arts theater and interna- tional conference center. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the then mayor of Jerusalem, Ehud Olmert, lauded the new center's goal of promoting civility and respect among Jews and between Jews and Muslims. Tom Tugend Jewish Telegraphic Agency Los Angeles ince its beginning in 1977, the Simon Wiesenthal Center has become a major player on the international scene, but it now faces its most daunting challenge. At risk is its Center for Human Dignity - Museum of Tolerance in the heart of Jerusalem. For the past five years, Rabbi Marvin Hier, the Wiesenthal Center's founder and dean, has poured his formidable energies and negotiating skills into the $200 million project as the capstone of his career. But now the project is running into a roadblock: In a petition to the Israeli High Court of Justice, lawyers for two Muslim organizations asserted that thousands of Muslims who died during the Crusades of the 12th and 13th centuries were buried at the site where the center is being built. They also argue that associates of the prophet Mohammed were interred at the S 30 March 2 e 2006 Muslim Remains Last month, Olmert reiterated his el YS support for the ruling. "This is an essential project for Jerusalem, a landmark that will change the face of Jerusalem forever. I stand behind it 100 percent." But in recent weeks, workmen excavating the site unearthed bones and par- tial skeletons from the old Muslim Mamilla, or Maman Allah, ceme- tery. There is agreement that Muslims have been buried at the site, possibly five layers deep, for many centuries. Rabbi Hier said, "Never in a mil- lion years would we have under- taken this project if the govern- ment of Israel or the Jerusalem municipality had told us that we were building atop a Muslim cemetery. We would have rejected the site out of hand." Rabbi Hier said he was assured by local and national authorities that there were no legal impedi- ments to building on the site, now mainly a large parking lot. Also on the site is a four-level underground garage, excavated and built 30 years ago, with no protests from Muslim religious authorities, according to Rabbi Hier. Even earlier, in 1964, when the now-defunct Palace Hotel stood on part of the parcel, the highest Muslim religious council in Jerusalem ruled that the cemetery had been inactive for such a long time that it had lost its sacred character and could be used for public purposes, Rabbi Hier said. Lawyers for the Wiesenthal Center presented three possible compromises at the Supreme Court hearing: build a dignified monument to the ancient ceme- tery, refurbish a nearby modern Muslim cemetery or rebury the bones at another site, all at the cen- ter's expense. Israeli politicians have criticized the plan. Likud Party member Reuven Rivlin, the speaker of the Knesset, asked,"Why, for God's sake, does a house of tolerance need to be built on a Muslim cemetery? It goes against logic." He added: "My parents are buried on the Mount of Olives. If someone decided they needed to be moved to build a museum of tolerance, I'd be very angry" The Israel office of the Anti- Defamation League has appealed to the Wiesenthal Center for a "pause" in construction, but retracted the call after the High Court appointed Shamgar. On the Muslim side, Irkrima Sabri, the grand mufti of Jerusalem, has petitioned UNESCO to declare the disputed area an international historical site. Local Criticism One factor in the confrontation is the long-standing hostility to the project by influential segments of Jerusalem's citizenry. Among the early skeptics were officials at Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial, who argued that there was no need for a com- peting Holocaust museum. After lengthy discussions with Yad Vashem, the Wiesenthal Center agreed that its new museum would not deal with the Holocaust. Rabbi Hier is not about to quit on the project, which has already cost $10 million. "I have absolute faith that the Center for Human Dignity will rise in Jerusalem, but only in the pres- ent location',' he said. "We've gone through all the required processes for more than five years, all the architectural and building plans are for this specific site, and we've gone too far for any changes." El Answering Israers Critics The Charge: Israel is coming down too hard on the Palestinians, following their recent parliamentary elections. After all, even though Hamas won a majority of the seats, President Mahmoud Abbas is committed to peace, disarmament and negotiations. The Answer: While Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas gives moderate speeches when talking in English, he failed to give such a message to Hamas when its legislators were sworn into office last month in Ramallah. He could have stressed that the parliament must abide by earlier agreements with Israel and to the international community. He could have required Hamas to disarm and dismantle its military infrastructure, and reject violence as a strategy and tool. And he could have re-affirmed the commitment to recognize Israel and reject a "one-state solution" that would see the Jewish state eliminated from the Middle East. Unfortunately, he said none of these things. — Allan Gale, Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit