His plays focus on the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict and the issue of homosexuality, among other topics, but are not limited to these themes. In 2017 he presented
Tunnel Boring Machine, a comedy exploring the journey of a Palestinian and an Israeli in the
Gaza tunnels. On 26 November 2019 he visited the
Valenciennes hospital center to read his texts and engage with patients. In 2018 he directed
HATE with
Lætitia Dosch. In 2020, Yuval Rozman directed
The Jewish Hour, a reflection on Jewish identity. The
COVID-19 pandemic impacted the project, but he still won the Impatience Prize. Regarding this play, he stated, "It was in France that I discovered I was Jewish". After the start of the
Gaza war, a performance of
The Jewish Hour was canceled following the
2023 Brussels shooting. Speaking about the war, Yuval Rozman said in the media: "On one hand, of course, condemn
Hamas, terrorism, and all its horrors directed not against the Israeli people, but against Jews, and at the same time, acknowledge that there is a responsibility of the Israeli government, that there is still an occupation, Israeli war crimes". In 2023, he presented a new play,
Ahouvi, about the romantic relationship between an Israeli woman and a Frenchman. == Works ==