Already embroiled in controversy due to an anti-Israel resolution earlier this month, UNESCO World Heritage Committee passed a second resolution, entitled “Old City of Jerusalem and its Walls,” challenging the Jewish connection to Jerusalem. The resolution also criticized Israel for refusing to let UNESCO experts examine Jerusalem holy sites, according to the Washington Post.

In a statement Wednesday, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) criticized the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for “manufacturing history” with the second resolution, which 10 countries supported and eight opposed. Two countries abstained, while Jamaica was absent. The resolution also refers to the Temple Mount, one of Judaism’s most sacred sites, by its Arabic name of “Al-Aqsa Mosque/Al-Haram Al-Sharif.”

“Once again, a UNESCO body has made itself complicit with a perverse Palestinian campaign to manufacture a history that does not include Jews in the Holy Land,” Marvin D. Nathan, ADL National Chair, and ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a joint statement.

The ADL also accused the UNESCO World Heritage Committee of endorsing “a false depiction of one of the world’s most ancient holy sites” with this week’s resolution.

“To ignore or deny the Jewish connection to the Temple Mount is to ignore or deny what makes Jerusalem so holy and resonant for the world, including the Christian community,” Nathan and Greenblatt said.             

 PLO Secretary-General Saeb Erekat said Wednesday that Jordan’s Hashemite Kingdom, “through diplomatic channels, has been doing everything possible in order to preserve the status quo of the historical Holy Sites.”

Erekat also accused Israel of “illegal” tampering with Jerusalem’s Muslim and Christian traditions  “Since its occupation of the city in 1967.”