Majd al-Krum
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| Hebrew transcription(s) | |
| • Also spelled | Majd al-Kurum (official) |
Majd al-Krum in the 1970s | |
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| Coordinates:32°55′14″N35°15′10″E / 32.92056°N 35.25278°E /32.92056; 35.25278 | |
| Grid position | 173/258PAL |
| Country | Israel |
| District | Northern |
| Area | |
• Total | 5.4 km2 (2.1 sq mi) |
| Population (2023)[1] | |
• Total | 15,144 |
| • Density | 2,800/km2 (7,300/sq mi) |
| Name meaning | "Watch-house of the vineyard"[2] |
Majd al-Krum (Arabic:مَجْدُ الْكُرُوم,romanized: Majd al-Kurūm;Hebrew:מג'ד אל-כרום) is anArab town located in theGalilee inIsrael'sNorthern District about 16 kilometers (10 miles) east ofAcre. Its inhabitants are primarilyMuslim. In 2023 it had a population of 15,144.[1]
The name Majd al-Krum translates fromArabic as "watch-house of the vineyard",[2] reflecting the town's fame for the quality of its grapevines.[3] Rock-carved pits on the outskirts of the town were used to press the grapes to make wine since ancient times.
Majd al-Krum has been identified asBeit HaKerem, aJewishTalmudic-period town mentioned in theMishnah, whose means the same in Hebrew and Arabic.[4][5]

Majd al-Krum is an ancient site in the heart of theGalilee, situated in the northwestern end of theBeit HaKerem Valley, called al-Shaghur in Arabic, at the foot of Jabal Mahüz.[6][7] It is the largest Arab locality in the valley. It historically derived its importance from its position in the valley, which serves as the shortest and most accessible route betweenAcre in the west to the central Galilee,Safed, andDamascus to the east, and from its abundant spring.[8]
Ancient remains, includingcisterns dug into the rock, have been found in Majd al-Krum.[6] In the center of Majd al-Krum, there is an ancient well, a spring, aRoman-era tomb and ruins dating to theCrusader period.[9]
During theCrusader era, Majd al-Krum was known asMergelcolon. It was part ofStephanie of Milly's inheritance.[10] Stephanie was the maternal grandmother ofJohn Aleman, who transferredBeit Jann,Sajur,Nahf and Majd al-Krum to theTeutonic Knights in 1249.[11]
In 1517, Majd al-Krum was incorporated into theOttoman Empire. An Ottoman document from 1573 states that the men of Majd al-Krum and nearby villages joined forces with themembers of the Shihab clan andMansur ibn Furaykh from theBeqaa Valley, carrying out raids that led to the deaths of fifty or sixty people.[12]
Majd al-Krum was listed in the 1596 Ottomantax registers as being in thenahiya (subdistrict) ofAcre, part of theSafed Sanjak. It had a population of 85 households and five bachelors, all Muslims. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of 25% on various agricultural products, including wheat, barley, olives or fruit trees, cotton, and goats and/or beehives; a total of 16,560akçe.[13][14]
DuringZaydani family rule of the Galilee under the chiefZahir al-Umar (1730s–1770s), Majd al-Krum was a fortified village, with an unspecified number of towers built along its walls sometime during the same period. It was garrisoned by the local residents,[15] who were allied to the Zaydani family.[16] Oral accounts from Majd al-Krum maintain that the old mosque in the village and a cluster of homes around it date to this period.[16] Zahir was killed in his Acre headquarters by the Ottomans in 1775. When his Ottoman-appointed replacement,Jazzar Pasha, pursued Zahir's sons, who were holding out against the governor in their Galilee strongholds, the inhabitants of Majd al-Krum supported Zahir's son Ali.[16] The latter used Majd al-Krum and nearbyAbu Sinan as his main strongholds, and launched raids against Acre, prompting Jazzar to mobilize his troops in the village ofAmqa off the Mediterranean coast, north of Acre. Ali gathered the fighting men of Majd al-Krum, along with Abu Sinan andDeir Hanna, and besieged Jazzar's camp. Reinforcements from Acre dispersed Ali and his men, and defeated them at Abu Sinan. Jazzar himself then took lead of the army and led the assault on Majd al-Krum.[15] According to the historianAdel Manna, the fighting took place on the plain outside of the village, and Jazzar was victorious.[16] Once Majd al-Krum had fallen, Jazzar executed its defenders and sent their severed heads to the imperial capital atConstantinople as evidence of his success. He then proceeded against Ali, who had relocated his base to nearbyRameh.[15]
A map fromNapoleon's invasion of 1799 byPierre Jacotin showed the place, named asEl Megd El Kouroum.[17] In 1838, Majd al-Krum was noted as a Muslim village in the Shaghur subdistrict, which was located betweenSafed, Acre andTiberias.[18] In 1875, the French explorerVictor Guérin visited and described Majd al-Krum as being divided into three quarters, each with a differentsheikh. The total population was 800 Muslims,[19] In 1881, thePalestine Exploration Fund'sSurvey of Western Palestine described it as a village built of stone and surrounded by olive trees and arable land, inhabited by 600–800 Muslims.[20] A population list from about 1887 showed that Majd al-Krum had 1,075 inhabitants, all Muslims.[21]


In the1922 census of Palestine conducted by theBritish Mandate authorities, Majd al-Krum had a population of 889, of which 885 wereSunni Muslim, threeShia Muslims and oneChristian.[22] In the1931 census, Majd al-Krum had 226 occupied houses and a population of 1,006 Muslims.[23] In the1945 statistics, Majd al-Krum had 1,400 inhabitants, all Muslims.[24] They owned a total of 17,828dunams of land, while 2214 dunams were public property.[25]
During the1936–1939 Arab revolt against British Mandatory rule and increased Jewish settlement in Palestine, Majd al-Krum was one of the first villages in the Galilee to participate in the revolt with a resident, Abu Faris, claiming he was the first individual to take up arms in the Galilee during the revolt and the first to have his house demolished by the British as punishment for his participation. Abu Faris became the second-in-command of the revolt in the Galilee until 1938 when he refused an order to assassinate a Palestinian Arab supporter of thePeel Commission partition plan for Palestine into Jewish and Arab states. Abu Faris later left Palestine for Lebanon after a major political leader of the revolt,Amin al-Husayni, ordered his assassination.[26]

Majd al-Krum was captured byIsraeli forces in October 1948 duringOperation Hiram. A unit of theArab Liberation Army (ALA) that had been stationed there withdrew from the village upon the Israelis' approach. As he was departing, the ALA'sIraqi commander assembled the inhabitants around the village well and suggested that they not flee the village, but rather stay and surrender to Israeli officers that they knew. Accordingly, a group of Majd al-Krum's residents contacted Haim Auerbach, an Israeli intelligence officer based inNahariya (who a group of villagers had previously defended from an attack near Acre). Auerbach arranged for Majd al-Krum's surrender and pledged no harm would come to the village.[27]
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However, on 6 November, an Israeli Army unit, unaware of the village's surrender, entered the village and confronted the other Israeli unit already present in the village. The two sides realized their mistake after a brief exchange of fire, and the latter unit was replaced by the incoming unit. The new unit ordered the residents to hand over their weapons within 30 minutes despite having already surrendered their arms a week prior. Before the deadline was reached, the commanding Israeli officer ordered the demolition of a home and gathered five residents, blindfolded them and executed them by gunfire to demonstrate their seriousness. They gathered another five residents to execute but were stopped by a known Palestinian Arab informant fromDamun, Shafiq Buqa'i. Buqa'i requested the Israeli officers free the residents by explaining to them the earlier agreement made between the villagers and Auerbach.[27]
During the 1948 war, the village ofSha'ab was largely depopulated and most of its residents settled in Majd al-Krum, some permanently and others temporarily.[28] Many people who fled Majd al-Krum settled in theShatila refugee camp in Lebanon.[29] A former fighter from the village, Abed Bishr, leased a small plot of land outside Beirut and founded the Shatila refugee camp and gathered other refugees from Majd al-Krum to settle there. According to historian Julie Peteet, the role of Majd al-Krum and its refugees "was foundational in its [the camp's] establishment."[30] According to Yiftachel, Majd al-Krum "experienced tremendous upheaval" during the 1948 war, with about half of its inhabitants becoming refugees in Lebanon while becoming home to about 300 people from nearby villages,[7] mainly Sha'ab, Damun andBirwa.[31]
Prior to the 1948 war, Majd al-Krum's land area consisted of 20,065dunams (20.07hectares), 69% of which was expropriated by the Israeli state between 1948 and the mid-1970s.[32] The majority of the land was expropriated on the basis of 1949Absentees' Property Law from refugees who fled during the war, the remainder for "public purposes" or on the basis of lacking formal title (communal land as designated by Ottoman-era land laws).[32]
Jurisdiction over expropriated lands subsequently came under theIsrael Land Authority (ILA), which, because of a 1960 law prohibiting the sale of state lands, began a process of land exchange with Majd al-Krum's remaining inhabitants.[33] Accordingly, many residents of Majd al-Krum exchanged agricultural land they owned for expropriated land within the village proper, i.e. areas designated for residential use, in lieu of purchasing lands expropriated from the village.[33] The typical exchange rate entailed the residents' transfer of five dunams of their agricultural lands for one dunam of land within the residential areas of the village, and the ILA would normally keep a 10–25% ownership stake in the residential parcel.[33] The ILA minority ownership stake was not explicitly marked in surveys, thus guaranteeing the ILA control over the residents' right to build on their newly acquired parcels.[33] The process of land exchange was particularly active between 1965 and 1980, during which 15,860 dunams were transferred to the ILA in exchange for 3,010 dunams transferred to Majd al-Krum's residents.[34]
In 1964 about 5,100 dunams of land were expropriated by the state for the construction of the Jewish town ofKarmiel, whose establishment was declared as an effort toJudaize the Galilee by Israeli Prime MinisterLevi Eshkol.[35] In 1966, efforts for a master plan began and were completed in 1978. However, the master plan was not approved by the authorities and while the population grew from 4,000 to 6,700 between 1966 and 1990, no new land was allocated to Majd al-Krum to cope with population growth.[36] Beginning in the 1970s, theJewish Agency launched efforts to build around sixty small Jewish communities, then known asmitzpim (observation points), in between Arab villages in the Galilee to monitor and check Arab building activity.[35] Among these Jewish communities wereLavon,Tuval,Gilon andTzurit, which all border Majd al-Krum.[35]
Several hundred residents of Majd al-Krum took part in theLand Day demonstrations of 1976, which protested another round of the state's expropriation of Arab-owned land, in which 2,100 dunams from Majd al-Krum were transferred to expand Karmiel.[37] Six Arab protesters were killed in nearby Arab towns and since then, mass expropriation of Arab-owned land by the state has virtually ended.[37]
In 1977, large anti-government demonstrations were held in Majd al-Krum and nearby villages to protest the demolition of a house in Majd al-Krum built near the road between Safed and Acre. One person was killed and several others injured as police attempted to disperse protesters. The incident prompted mayor Muhammad Manna to leave theLabor Party and joinHadash. Manna was subsequently reelected in 1986.[38]Tawfiq Ziad, a member of theKnesset, declared "as long as there are stones in the Galilee, we shall use them to stone those who try to destroy our homes."[39] The protest and the response of the state led to more assertive opposition by Israel's Arab community toward state policies.[38]
During the2006 Lebanon War, over 40Katyusha rockets landed in the vicinity of Shaghur, with the nearby city of Karmiel being the apparent target. Two men from Majd al-Krum, Baha' Karim and Muhammad Subhi Mana', were killed when a rocket struck near them.[40]
During the2023-24 Israel-Hezbollah conflict, Majd al-Krum was affected by a Hezbollah rocket attack. On October 25, 2024, two residents, Hassan Suad (21) and Arjwan Manaa (19), were killed when salvo of approximately 30 rockets fired byHezbollah struck the area.[41] Hezbollah later claimed responsibility for the attack, stating it targeted the city ofKarmiel, which is approximately 6 km to the southeast of Majd al-Krum.[42]
Majd al-Krum was declared alocal council in 1963.[7] Members of the council are elected and the council is responsible for basic municipal services, although local planning has remained in the jurisdiction of the Central Galilee Local Planning Committee appointed by the central government of Israel.[43] In 2003 Majd al-Krum and the nearby local councils ofDeir al-Asad andBi'ina merged to form the city ofShaghur.[44] Shaghur was dissolved in 2009.[45]
The headquarters of Moona, an NGO that works to integrate Israeli Arabs into the high tech industry, are located in Majd al-Krum.[46]
In 2017,Israel Railways proposed building an additional train station at Majd al-Krum on theRailway to Karmiel.[47]