
A resident reveals how a 1940s hillside cemetery in Taman Bukit Jati, Klang, ended up beside a road after a 1996 landslide.
IT sits quietly at the roadside in Taman Bukit Jati, Klang, its headstone still wrapped in white cloth, surrounded by overgrown shrubs. To passing drivers it looks out of place — a lone grave beside a busy road, with no cemetery in sight. And for weeks, it has had all of Malaysia asking the same question: how did it get there?
Now, a long-time resident has stepped forward with the answer — and the story goes back nearly 80 years.
Badrol Hisham Muhamad Rashidi, 67, has lived in Taman Bukit Jati for four decades. A retired TNB employee, he was there when everything changed.
In 1996, a developer began construction of 182 units of TNB staff quarters in the area. The project required a road to connect the new housing to the TNB facility — but no road existed. The solution was to cut through a hillside to create one.
What the developer may not have fully accounted for was what was on top of that hill. The slope had served as a burial ground since the 1940s.
“When the developer wanted to build here, they needed to excavate the hillside to make a road,” Badrol told Harian Metro.
“But the soil in the burial area at the top of the hill suddenly gave way. When it collapsed, one grave came down with it — and remarkably, the headstone did not break.”
That is how a grave that once sat quietly atop a hill ended up beside a road.
Badrol said he had explored the hilltop himself on a previous occasion, and found multiple graves in varying states of overgrowth. What struck him most was that none of them bore any names.
“There were river stones marking each grave, but not a single one had a name on it,” he said, adding that at least one of the graves was unusually long in size.
With no names and no known next-of-kin, determining who these individuals were — or finding their descendants — has proven impossible.
Local folklore has long swirled around the site. Older residents have spoken of a past attempt to relocate the roadside grave that was allegedly abandoned after unexplained incidents occurred during the process. Some believe the graves may belong to warriors from an earlier era, as the surrounding area was once dense jungle.
Badrol said the matter of whether to relocate the grave should rest with the relevant authorities — not the community.
“We do not know who the rightful heirs are, since none of the graves have any names. And the land belongs to TNB. So it is up to the religious authorities to decide whether to relocate all of the graves,” he said.
The Selangor Islamic Religious Department (JAIS) reported confirmed it is aware of the viral attention surrounding the grave and will be taking action. Speaking to the Malay daily, its Public Relations Division said the department’s Graves Unit will investigate the existence of the grave, with further steps to follow once findings are complete.
For now, the lone grave at the roadside in Taman Bukit Jati remains exactly where the hillside left it — a quiet reminder that beneath the roads and housing estates of modern Malaysia, older histories are still waiting to be found.



