Daily burials have been on going for over 1,400 years and the site is on the
Tentative List of UNESCO's World Heritage sites. Burials in Najaf have been documented as early as the
Parthian and
Sassanid eras and ancient
Mesopotamian cities often had similar cemeteries, where there was an accumulation of tombs. Wadi-us-Salaam in Najaf was once a holy cemetery for
Jews and was then called Baniqia, which could be the first recorded name for the area. The name Baniqia also was found in some texts which state that Abraham once visited and stayed in this village before continuing his journey from Mesopotamia to the Levant. The cemetery saw heavy fighting during the
2004 Battle of Najaf. It is estimated that during the
Iraq War, about 200 to 250 corpses were buried there daily; however, in 2010 this number had decreased to less than 100. Approximately 50,000 new bodies are interred in the cemetery annually from across the globe. This figure is an increase on the approximately 20,000 bodies, primarily from Iran, that used to be interred annually in the early 20th century. Most Iraqi and many Iranian Shi'ites have a relative buried in the cemetery. As of 2014—coinciding with conflict against
ISIL—it has been reported that burial plots are running out, resulting in many being stolen, illegally resold or improvised. According to one gravedigger: "I've never had it so busy. Not even
after 2003 or 2006 [the height of
Iraq's civil war]." == Important monuments ==