Following the expulsion of the Catholic Crusaders and the dismantlement of their "Latinate Kingdom" settler-colony in the 12th and 13th centuries, Palestine remained in the crosshairs of Europe's fanatical Christians.

The followers of Christianity's new iteration, Protestantism, were then joined by Europe's fanatical imperialists in the late 18th century.

Ever since, the European enemies of the Palestinian people have persisted in their efforts to rob them of their homeland.

Napoleon Bonaparte conquered southern and central Palestine, marching from Gaza to Jaffa between February and May 1799, before being defeated in Acre.

His April 1799 proclamation, inspired by French Protestant Huguenot thinkers, urged Europe's Jews to colonise the country, but it went unheeded.