Kingdom Of Heaven -
The peace is shattered when a rogue band of Crusaders, led by a man claiming to have a mandate from a distant king, arrives demanding the "infidels" be purged from the oasis. They recognize Elian and demand he lead them.
Elian discovers a remote, unnamed village where a mix of Christian refugees, Sufi mystics, and Bedouin traders live in a fragile, unwritten peace. There is no church and no mosque—only a shared well and a stone wall that Elian is hired to repair. He finds purpose not in the "glory of God," but in the welfare of the people, echoing Balian’s work in the desert. Kingdom of Heaven
Following the fall of Jerusalem, Elian, a former knight-turned-mason, wanders the edges of the Sinai. Having survived the siege led by Saladin , he has abandoned his sword for a chisel, convinced that "God’s Kingdom" was a hollow promise used to justify the blood of thousands. The peace is shattered when a rogue band
Elian is faced with a choice reminiscent of King Baldwin IV’s struggle: follow the "will of kings" or protect the soul of the community. Remembering the lesson that his soul is in his keeping alone , he refuses to draw his sword for a "holy" cause. Instead, he uses his knowledge of the village’s fortifications—the very walls he built—to protect all the inhabitants, regardless of their faith. There is no church and no mosque—only a
wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Heaven_(film)">Balian of Ibelin or perhaps involving a confrontation between these new characters?
The story ends not with a grand battle for a throne, but with the rogue knights retreating, unable to break a wall defended by people who value life over dogma. Elian realizes that the "Kingdom of Heaven" isn't a city of gold or a seat of power; it is the world where God's will is done through the mercy and reason of men.