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To Noah's Mountain, With The Cats That Leapt Off The Ark

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  • To Noah's Mountain, With The Cats That Leapt Off The Ark

    TO NOAH'S MOUNTAIN, WITH THE CATS THAT LEAPT OFF THE ARK

    Mail on Sunday
    June 15, 2008 Sunday
    London

    Diana Preston finds both the landscapes and the inhabitants around
    Mount Ararat are steeped in history

    WHERE are you from?' asked the Iranian hotel housekeeper
    as, beetroot-faced from a morning's sightseeing wearing the
    obligatory hijab, I peeled off my headscarf in my room. 'England,'
    I replied. 'Ah,' a smile lit her face, 'Harry Potter!' This was one
    of many slightly surreal encounters on a journey around Mount Ararat
    that had begun in Armenia.

    We had flown into Yerevan, Armenia's capital, just before
    midnight. Women, smiling and weeping simultaneously, clutched bunches
    of dark red roses as they greeted returning family and friends. The
    emotion touched us though we were strangers. We drove into town along
    a darkened highway that suddenly blazed into a corridor of neon as
    we passed row after row of casinos.

    This kaleidoscope of images started to fall into place next morning
    after a substantial breakfast of tiny pancakes oozing with curd cheese,
    fluffy tabouleh, cucumber salad with parsley and dill, baskets of hot,
    flat bread - 'lavash' - and honeysweetened pastries.

    Armenia's food reflects its diverse, often fractured, past at the
    hands of waves of invaders - Mongols, Persians, Turks, Russians and
    others - all intent on grabbing a region straddling a major trade
    route between Europe and Asia.

    Geography has not been Armenia's friend but since independence from
    the most recent occupiers, the former Soviet Union, the country has
    been changing. Ladas still bowl along Yerevan's streets but so do
    Mercedes and BMWs, and even the odd Range Rover and Bentley.

    A statue of a stern and muscular 'Mother Armenia' from Soviet times
    towers over Yerevan but more striking is the snowy summit of the
    16,945ft Mount Ararat, just across the Turkish border, where the Ark
    supposedly came to rest after the Flood.

    The mountain is an impressive backdrop to St Gregory's Church at
    Zvartnots in the Ararat Valley where the King of Armenia converted
    to Christianity in 301AD and which today sits in gardens of nodding
    yellow hollyhocks.

    Religion remains hugely important to Armenians as does music. During
    Sunday service in the cathedral at Echmiadzin, choristers sing in
    glorious soaring notes to the bearded priests with pale, icon-like
    faces who sing back to them.

    The cathedral owes its existence to Armenian ingenuity.

    When, in the 17th Century, Shah Abbas of Persia ordered his invading
    armies to destroy it, Armenian craftsmen hastily carved the Shah's
    face on the bell tower and told the Persian soldiers the image had
    suddenly and miraculously appeared. The cathedral survived.

    The many Armenian churches and monasteries hidden away in lonely
    forests and stark ravines, some in the shadow of Ararat, testify to
    a precarious past and the necessity of isolation and inaccessibility.

    The Monastery of the Holy Lance at Gegard lies at the end of a
    dramatic gorge, its church carved into the cliff itself. Priests
    concealed books and relics in ceramic jars beneath the floors at
    times of danger. Some churches even have moveable columns with hidden
    chambers behind them. Today, though, there are no marauding Mongols -
    just tourists and old women selling dried mulberries, sheets of chewy
    ' cherry leather' and strings of soft, young walnuts in grape juice
    jelly. ROM Yerevan, our route lay northwest through flower meadows
    and pastureland to the southern slopes of Ararat's neighbour Mount
    Aragats and the fortress of Amberd. Surrounded by cliffs on three
    sides, its name means 'inaccessible' but Timur - Tamburlaine the
    Great - found and sacked it in the 14th Century.

    As well as castles, churches and monasteries, each with their own
    dramatic story, our journey showed us diverse peoples.

    In the cemetery of a Kurdish sect, lichen-mottled carved stone horses
    that once denoted the graves of the wealthy still stand.

    Near Lake Sevan, we passed through villages of Russian 'Old
    Believers'. Described by Tolstoy, they still lead lives of biblical
    simplicity. Small boys with elfin cheekbones and pale blond hair sell
    carrots by the roadside.

    Lake Sevan is quite a contrast, a buzzing tourist resort where
    jetskiers zip across the pale blue waters that provide a refreshing
    dip in the summer heat. We recalled it wistfully when, a few miles
    beyond the lake, the women in our group donned their hijabs to cross
    into north-western Iran, once part of greater Armenia.

    Beyond the border, the road at first twists through knifesharp purple,
    brown and sagehued mountains. Descending into softer terrain, we saw
    families picnicking beneath apricot and walnut trees and learned that
    we had arrived on a special holiday.

    The woods around the onceisolated 9th Century Armenian monastery of
    St Stephen's were full of families out for the day.

    The doorkeeper who let us in to admire the glowing stonework and
    delicate carvings was wearing a Manchester United shirt.

    Southwards, towards Tabriz, it grew even hotter. The fields of tall
    sunflowers were almost too bright to look at. We rested in a restored
    17th Century caravanserai with thick walls for coolness and a stone
    platform in the centre of the courtyard where berobed merchants once
    displayed their goods.

    Tabriz was less romantic - a sprawling modern city where people
    hurry about with laptops under one arm and slabs of bread the size
    of skateboards under the other.

    But the cool interior of the 600-year-old Blue Mosque testifies
    to a more graceful past. So do the alleyways of the old bazaar
    where today's merchants offer everything from dried limes to garlic
    shampoo. Fertile orchards and meadows dotted with blue and white bee
    hives surround Tabriz. But further south, the landscape grows to more
    epic proportions.

    Takht-i-Soleiman - Solomon's Throne - rises up from rolling grasslands
    like something out of Lord Of The Rings.

    Water gushes down stone channels from the deep, dark pool in the
    middle of this hilltop fortress which has been many things - a temple
    to the Persian goddess

    Anahita, a most sacred shrine of the sunrevering Zoroastrians as
    well as, reputedly, the site of Solomon's palace. Legend says that
    he incarcerated demons and monsters in the depths of a small volcano
    nearby - Solomon's Dungeon. We climbed to the crater and peered
    gingerly into its sulphurous but otherwise empty depths.

    Twisting northwards again, we reached Lake Orumiyeh, its waters rimmed
    with a sparkling white crust of salt like a giant margarita. The
    crystals have formed into fantastic shapes along the shoreline.

    Paddling in the warm, salty water is fun - but like the Dead Sea
    it stings. I washed it off in the hotel run by the housekeeper who
    likes Harry Potter. C LOSE once again to Mount Ararat, we crossed
    from Iran into north-eastern Turkey, heartland of the Turkish Kurds,
    and also close to the Armenian border.

    At Ani, the long abandoned capital of Armenia near the city of Kars,
    the watchtowers of modern Armenia lie barely half a mile away across
    a deep river gorge.

    Ani is a place of tumbled ruins - victim of earthquakes and Mongol
    hordes - but enough remains to picture its once magnificent gateways,
    palaces and churches. Frescoes depicting biblical scenes, including
    gruesome martyrdoms, have survived, their colours still bright.

    Lake Van to the south was our last stop, seven times the size of Lake
    Geneva and the largest salt lake in the world.

    The finely carved 1,000-year-old Armenian Church of the Holy Cross
    sits on Akdamar Island, where tortoises sunbathe on the rocks.

    But it's definitely a cat's rather than a reptile's life in the town
    of Van, famous for its swimming felines.

    According to legend, a pair of cats on Noah's Ark grew restless,
    leapt overboard and swam to the shores of Lake Van. They were later
    blessed by Allah, his touch leaving ginger markings on their white
    fur. Through a genetic mutation, some have one amber eye and one
    blue. They are highly prized as pets but if you own one leave the
    loo seat down and be prepared for a shared bath-time.

    We spent our last night eating kebabs in a Kurdish restaurant after
    climbing the craggy Rock of Van to watch the sun set from the ruined
    castle.

    A cat with one golden and one blue eye watched us as we ate - the
    last surreal experience of a journey around Mount Ararat through a
    rich mixture of religions, cultures and landscapes in a part of the
    world that sees few visitors and deserves more..

    GETTING THERE

    Diana Preston travelled to Mount Ararat with Explore
    (www.explore.co.uk, 0844 499 0901) which offers various tours to
    the area between May and October. A 'tough', 14-night trek priced
    from £1,329pp takes in Ararat and Turkey's nearby Kackar Mountains,
    while 'Land Of The Golden Fleece', from £1,450pp, spends 15 nights
    in Armenia and Georgia.

    Prices include London flights (regional connections extra), all
    transportation, B& B, some other meals, local payment and a tour
    leader..

    --Boundary_(ID_aX0zcZxTTIsIMDbII4Ma EA)--
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