Reino De Los Cielos - Saladino El
So, whether you call him Saladin or Saladino, remember the lesson of the leper king and the blacksmith: Be without fear in the face of your enemies. Be brave and upright that God may love thee. Speak the truth always, even if it leads to your death. Safeguard the helpless and do no wrong.
This is the thesis of the film. Saladin (Saladino) is not a villain. He is a noble adversary. Unlike the Crusader zealots who slaughtered innocents decades earlier, when Saladin takes the city, he keeps his word. He lets the people walk free. He even cleans the floors of the holy sites. He proves that holiness is an action, not a flag. The film’s title is tricky. Most characters think the “Kingdom of Heaven” is the patch of dirt inside Jerusalem’s walls. But Balian learns the truth. When he is a lowly blacksmith in France, the village priest tells him he is going to hell. By the end, he understands that God does not live in stone churches or golden domes. “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you,” he says. “And you are not your own.” This is the film’s radical idea: Holiness isn't geographical. You don't need to kill your neighbor to protect God’s house. You need to protect the poor, tend the sick, and live a life of decency. Whether you pray to Allah or Christ, the path to the Reino de los Cielos is a straight line of moral courage. The Final Takeaway We remember Kingdom of Heaven for the siege of 1187, but we should remember it for Balian digging a well in the desert, or Saladin returning a fallen cross to a defeated enemy. saladino el reino de los cielos
Beyond the Walls: What ‘Saladino’ and ‘El Reino de los Cielos’ Teach Us About True Nobility So, whether you call him Saladin or Saladino,