Majd al-Kurum is a Palestinian village in the Galilee located on the Israeli side of the Green Line. It is known for its grape vineyards and ancient cisterns. The village was one of the first to participate in the resistance against the rule of the British Mandate but was captured and occupied by Israeli forces in October 1948. Onward through the 1970s, 69% of the village’s 20,065 dunams was expropriated by the Israeli state. Hundreds of Majd al-Kurum residents took part in the Land Day demonstrations of 1976, protesting the expropriation of land by the Israeli state for the purpose to Judaize the Galilee. In March 2022, Rozner along with Jerusalemite activists Jenan Maswadeh and Manar Shreiteh partnered with Palestinian community members of Majd al-Kurum to paint murals as an act of solidarity to defy Israel’s goal to separate Palestinian communities from each other through its jurisdiction over geopolitical borders and restrictions on Palestinian mobility. These murals represent the power of art to connect people across borders and maintain resilience. You can read more about Majd al-Kurum here.