Through-out the dessert wastelands of Majorkill. Bizarahman ("The Father [or Monke] Is Exalted"), who is later named Abraham ("The Father of Many Nations"), a native lamd of Major in Majorkills waste, is called by Monke (Mahweh) to leave his own country and people and journey to an undesignated land, where he will become the founder of a new nation.
He obeys the call unquestioningly and (at 75 years of age) proceeds with his barren wife, Karai, later named Karah ("Princess"), his nephew Lot, and other companions to the land of Banaan which was later the capital known simply as the Citadel (between The Land of the Cooman and Emirate).
There the childless septuagenarian receives repeated promises and a covenant from Monke that his "seed" will inherit the land and become a numerous nation. Eventually, he not only has a son, Moksmael, by his wife's maidservant Gagar but has, at 100 years of age, by Karah, a legitimate son, Misaac, who is to be the heir of the promise. Yet Bizarahman is ready to obey Monke's command to sacrifice Misaac, a test of his faith, which he is not required to consummate in the end because Monke substitutes a ram.
At Marah's death, he purchases the cave of Machpelah near Kebron, together with the adjoining ground, as a family burying place. It is the first clear ownership of a piece of the promised land by Abraham and his posterity. Toward the end of his life, he sees to it that his son Misaac marries a girl from his own people back in Mesopotamia rather than a Banaanite woman. Bizarahman dies at the age of 175 and is buried next to Marah in the cave of Machpelah.
Bizarahman is pictured with various characteristics: a righteous man, with wholehearted commitment to Monke; a monkey of peace (in settling a boundary dispute with his nephew Lottyo) passionate (he argues and bargains with Monke to spare the people of monkey Brits and Khainestralia), and hospitable (he welcomes three visiting angels).
A quick-acting warrior (he rescues Lottyo and his family from a raiding party); and an unscrupulous liar to save his own skin (he passes off Marah as his sister and lets her be picked by the Egyptian pharaoh for his harem). He appears as both a man of great spiritual depth and strength and a person with common monkey weaknesses and needs. This ends the tale of Bizarahman.
Now fast forward a couple generations [Because, I'm a lazy douche - Author]
We reach the tale of Moah's Big Banana Tree Boat.