Backlash greets plans for Muslim cemeteries across US

In this April 12, 2016 photo, Amjad Bhatti, president of the Islamic Society of Greater Worcester, poses inside the mosque in Worcester, Mass. He and other leaders of the mosque are hoping to build a Muslim cemetery on farmland in Dudley, Mass., but residents are vigorously opposing the project. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (The Associated Press)

In this April 12, 2016 photo, Amjad Bhatti, president of the Islamic Society of Greater Worcester, poses inside the mosque in Worcester, Mass. He and other leaders of the mosque are hoping to build a Muslim cemetery on farmland in Dudley, Mass., but residents are vigorously opposing the project. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (The Associated Press)

In this April 12, 2016 photo, Amjad Bhatti, president of the Islamic Society of Greater Worcester, poses outside the mosque in Worcester, Mass. He and other leaders of the mosque are hoping to build a Muslim cemetery on farmland in Dudley, Mass., but residents are vigorously opposing the project. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (The Associated Press)

Leaders of a Massachusetts mosque are hoping to build a Muslim cemetery on farmland in Dudley, but residents are vigorously opposing the project.

Neighbors say they fear Islamic burial practices could contaminate groundwater or well water because Muslims traditionally do not embalm or use coffins.

Similar sentiments have been expressed by people in communities around the country where Muslim cemeteries have been proposed, including Farmersville, Texas, Walpole, Massachusetts, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and Farmington, Minnesota.

Muslim leaders say the opposition is rooted in bigotry. But residents of the communities where the cemeteries are being proposed say they have legitimate concerns.