In the 11th century, a famine plague hit Egypt. The Sultan resorted to the aid of the prosperous caliphate of Denia. In exchange, the Sultan gave Denia an object coveted by all of Christendom: The chalice of Jesus’ Last Supper, confiscated from the Temple of Jerusalem before the Crusades.
The story of the chalice is the story of the eternal battle between concord and the hatred of men. Their survival of the vicissitudes of history teaches us that despite the failures of the past, different people and cultures are capable of tolerating and respecting each other. This is the chronicle of the dimension of the human being, coined in a humble cup that has survived 2000 years of civilization.