On the way to the Armenian Genocide Memorial, I met a handsome guy who asked me to take a photo of him. Then he pointed to the snowy mountain in front of him and told me excitedly that it was the Alara Mountain where Noah's Ark in the Bible docked. Arara, hailed as the most precious gift of God to Armenia, was reduced to Turkey's eastern border after the Armenian genocide in Turkey that year. But in Armenians' minds, the mountain is a spiritual totem forever. The Bible story of Noah's Ark tells of the God who created all things in the world, the Lord, seeing the earth full of corruption, rape and wrongful evil, and planning to destroy the wicked by floods. He also found that there was a good man named Noah among mankind. So Noah was instructed to build an ark, with his wife, son and daughter-in-law, animals and birds, and must be aboard the ark with both females and males. The fierce floods flooded the highest mountain, and all the creatures on land died, only the Noah family and life in the ark survived. The ark stopped near Alara and the flood began to subside.