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The Patriotic Thread

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  • Rien Long

    Finding his roots
    An NFL player with an Armenian heritage heads to the homeland.

    By Ani Amirkhanian


    Documentary filmmaker Peter Musurlian displays the video he produced of NFL player Rien Long finding his roots on a trip to Armenia. Long is displayed on the screen with Father Der Hovaness, left, a priest with whom he became acquainted during his 15-day trip to Armenia.
    Peter Musurlian can be found toting a video camera around the cityand documenting people and places for Burbank TV6, the city's public-access channel.

    But it turns out that Musurlian's camera isn't only trained on city doings. He's got a larger field of view.

    Musurlian, 44, the senior producer and station manager for Burbank's public access channel, is also a documentary filmmaker.

    He recently finished his first documentary film, "The Long Journey from the NFL to Armenia," which he produced, directed and submitted to the Arpa International Film Festival — a three-day, Los Angeles-based festival of film screenings that explore issues of diaspora, exile and multiculturalism.

    In his film, Musurlian documents the journey of Rien Long, a 25-year-old defensive lineman for the Tennessee Titans, on his trip to Armenia in search of his roots.

    • Finding his roots
    • REEL CRITIC:
    'Prestige' a coolly intelligent thriller
    • THEATER REVIEW:
    Just spooky enough for kids
    • Worth a thousand words
    "I'd been studying the idea of going to Armenia," said Musurlian, a Glendale resident. "In the 1960s, everybody wanted to go back to the homeland. That was the dream. Now it's a reality."

    The Wisconsin-born Musurlian, who is of Armenian descent and the grandson of genocide survivors, learned about Long after his friend and co-producer, Arbi Ohanian, heard about the Armenian football player.

    "I had no idea who Long was," Musurlian said. "I was not interested in the first place."
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    But Musurlian changed his mind about Long after he found out that the 6-foot, 300-pound lineman had always wanted to go to Armenia to learn about his heritage.

    "He had only heard stories during family functions," Musurlian said. "Long's great-uncle would talk about Armenia. That was the driving force in his interest in Armenia."

    Musurlian also discovered that Long identified so strongly with his ancestral roots that he opted to get a tattoo of the Armenian flag on his right bicep.

    He even got a tattoo of a design inspired by an 11th-century Armenian cathedral on his left arm with his Armenian name, "Vartan," woven into the design.

    Musurlian accompanied Long, his mother and grandmother to Armenia for 15 days in March.

    He documented Long's visits to historical monuments, cathedrals, schools and points of interest and interviewed Long about his experience and impressions of the country.

    His co-producer Arbi Ohanian went along to provide assistance to Long and Musurlian.

    "I participated mainly by helping out with some of the planning, guiding the tour through the different locations, being a translator," Ohanian said.

    "Peter made it very easy for me to participate in this process."

    Musurlian hopes the documentary will interest more non-Armenian audiences.

    His goal is for non-Armenian film goers to see the film as much as Armenians.

    "I'm not doing this film just for Armenians," Musurlian said. "I want to see people's reactions and I'd like to hear everyone's response."

    The festival films are being shown from Oct. 25 through Oct. 27 at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood.

    Musurlian's documentary, "The Long Journey from the NFL to Armenia," will be shown on Oct. 26.

    For more information, call (323) 663-1882.
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

    Comment


    • Soad

      DOCUMENTARY FEATURING SYSTEM OF A DOWN PREMIERING IN DECEMBER

      Blabbermouth.net, NY
      Oct 26 2006

      Launch Radio Networks reports: A new documentary about the history
      of genocide throughout the 20th century, featuring SYSTEM OF A DOWN,
      will premiere in Los Angeles on December 8, with the film expanding to
      New York and other selected cities in January. Titled "Screamers", the
      film examines why genocides continue to occur, from the 1915 Armenian
      extermination to the Holocaust to more recent atrocities in Rwanda
      and Darfur. The members of SYSTEM OF A DOWN are all grandchildren
      of survivors of the Armenian genocide, during which the Turkish
      government slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians. Turkey has denied its
      actions despite historical and eyewitness evidence.

      "Screamers" was directed by filmmaker Carla Garapedian, who is also an
      Armenian-American. SYSTEM OF A DOWN frontman Serj Tankian told Launch
      about his and the band's participation in the project. "I've helped
      kind of advise Carla as the film started, and I got the band involved,
      SYSTEM OF A DOWN involved, and she basically came and shot a number
      of our shows and followed the band through our recognition campaign
      for the Armenian genocide," he said. "She's also interviewed a lot of
      activists, scholars, people in the government in different countries -
      U.S., Europe, a lot of different countries in Europe."

      The film also features an interview with Tankian's grandfather,
      who is one of the few remaining eyewitnesses of the genocide.

      Tankian and drummer John Dolmayan met with members of Congress last
      April to lobby for legislation recognizing the genocide. The bill has
      been blocked by Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, who, according
      to Vanity Fair, has received $500,000 in campaign contributions from
      the Turkish government to block the vote.

      SYSTEM OF A DOWN is currently on an extended hiatus following the
      release of its "Mezmerize" and "Hypnotize" albums last year and the
      touring that followed.

      General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

      Comment


      • Ando

        Hey,
        do you guys know if Ando is married?

        Comment


        • PETROSIAN VS THE ELITE
          by Ray Keene and Julian Simpole, Batsford, 299 pages, £15.99.

          British Chess Magazine, UK
          Nov 2 2006

          BCM Chess Book Reviews : November 2006

          Now that we have a manoeuvring, positional player in place as the
          undisputed world champion and Garry Kasparov has retired, one wonders
          whether fashion will change and there will be shift of focus by
          students of the game towards the great technical players of the past.

          Kramnik has often been compared to Petrosian, and it seems like a very
          opportune moment to review the career of the Armenian world champion
          of the 1960s. One of the reviewer's personal regrets is that I was
          too prone to hero-worship the likes of Fischer in my youth.

          Like many, I was carried along by the zeitgeist, but I now feel I would
          have learnt far more about practical chess technique by studying the
          games of Petrosian. Too late for me, but younger readers might do well
          to buy this book and study the 71 victories of Iron Tigran contained
          within it. Julian Simpole is acknowledged as providing the bulk of
          the text. He has not relied on computer analysis, and the contents do
          not overlap to any significant degree with Peter Clarke's collection
          of Petrosian games nor Kasparov's chapter on Petrosian in My Great
          Predecessors. This looks like a most enjoyable read. JS.

          [for other books on chess, go to
          http://www.bcmchess.co.uk/reviews/bcmrev0611.html ]
          General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

          Comment


          • Silva needs our help! Deadline: tomorrow

            Dear Friends,

            I have recently found out that a young Armenian artist – Silva Hakobyan is one of the only 20 selected nominees for the BBC’s competition of the world’s best young artist/band called “The Next Big Thing”.

            She has been selected from thousands of contestants from around the world. Right now, besides being judged by a panel of musicians, there is a public vote on the website.

            All the votes must be in by Tuesday 28 November at midnight GMT.

            The six finalists will be announced on BBC World Service's The Beat broadcast on Wednesday 29 and Thursday 30 November.

            The final will take place on 9 December 2006 in a special program - when the winner of the BBC's search for The Next Big Thing will be announced.

            Please take a minute to vote for her and support our fellow Armenian. It is our chance and our responsibility to do so. She is listed as “Silva”

            International news, analysis and information from the BBC World Service. In-depth news and sport with audio, video and forums. BBC World Service reports in English and 42 other languages.


            I would also encourage you to forward this email to all your friends and mailing lists. And please remember that the deadline to cast a vote is in two days.

            Many of you also have access to thousands of viewers, listeners, readers, website visitors whom you could refer also. We will be running a banner on our website’s front page, and I would like you to use any possible way you can think of to spread the world. I am sure all of us would love her to win the competition and give us a reason to be proud.

            Regards,

            Armen Mkrtchyan
            CEO
            Yerevan Nights, Inc.

            Comment


            • Best of luck to her - and as much as I do wish her good luck and hope that she has the talent and artistry to suceed (and to make Armenians proud!) - voting in this type of thing is just not my type of thing - particualrly without being exposed to her work...and I don't have the time (or inclination) to do such between now and tomorrow night...(I'm not trying to be negative..its just a statement of fact). I highly encourage anyone else reading the above to check her out and if she doesn't totally embarass you/us to vote for her! (how was that?)

              Comment


              • She is a female version of Andre !
                She is talented and has potential
                worth listening to (just follow the link at the site for each performer)
                "All truth passes through three stages:
                First, it is ridiculed;
                Second, it is violently opposed; and
                Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                Comment


                • Currently Silva has only 4.4% of votes cast so yeah, come on vote.

                  p.s We saw Andre in concert in London a couple of weeks ago. How good is that guy?

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Hovik View Post
                    Dear Friends,

                    I have recently found out that a young Armenian artist – Silva Hakobyan is one of the only 20 selected nominees for the BBC’s competition of the world’s best young artist/band called “The Next Big Thing”.

                    She has been selected from thousands of contestants from around the world. Right now, besides being judged by a panel of musicians, there is a public vote on the website.

                    All the votes must be in by Tuesday 28 November at midnight GMT.

                    The six finalists will be announced on BBC World Service's The Beat broadcast on Wednesday 29 and Thursday 30 November.

                    The final will take place on 9 December 2006 in a special program - when the winner of the BBC's search for The Next Big Thing will be announced.

                    Please take a minute to vote for her and support our fellow Armenian. It is our chance and our responsibility to do so. She is listed as “Silva”

                    International news, analysis and information from the BBC World Service. In-depth news and sport with audio, video and forums. BBC World Service reports in English and 42 other languages.


                    I would also encourage you to forward this email to all your friends and mailing lists. And please remember that the deadline to cast a vote is in two days.

                    Many of you also have access to thousands of viewers, listeners, readers, website visitors whom you could refer also. We will be running a banner on our website’s front page, and I would like you to use any possible way you can think of to spread the world. I am sure all of us would love her to win the competition and give us a reason to be proud.

                    Regards,

                    Armen Mkrtchyan
                    CEO
                    Yerevan Nights, Inc.
                    www.YerevanNights.com
                    First question. Why has this blatant piece of spam been allowed to remain on this website? It has nothing at all to do with "Amenian Genocide News" and is just advertising.

                    Second question. Can we extrapolate from this "she is Armenian so all Armenians everywhere must vote for her regardless of whether they have heard a word of her singing, been able to compare her to the other acts, or have ever listened to the BBC" attitude to make some assumptions about the factual basis behind the Armenian Genocide? A denialist Turk might - if only they were that clever.
                    Plenipotentiary meow!

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by bell-the-cat View Post
                      First question. Why has this blatant piece of spam been allowed to remain on this website? It has nothing at all to do with "Amenian Genocide News" and is just advertising.

                      Second question. Can we extrapolate from this "she is Armenian so all Armenians everywhere must vote for her regardless of whether they have heard a word of her singing, been able to compare her to the other acts, or have ever listened to the BBC" attitude to make some assumptions about the factual basis behind the Armenian Genocide? A denialist Turk might - if only they were that clever.
                      First off, smile a bit xxxxx cat There's a chance you might be overreacting a bit don't you think?

                      Second, I don't believe I've seen a single message in the AG News forum that didn't have (however indirect it may be) a connection to the Armenian Genocide. No educated individual could possibly assert that Armenian artists struggle now in 2006 as much as they would if the Armenian Genocide had never taken place. As a result of that event, we were robbed of 90% of our homeland, tens of millions of Armenians who were killed or never born into our nation in the last 90+ years, and countless resources. Every single Armenian (no matter blood %) is a victim of this event, whether or not they recognize it. Silva is no different.

                      You were blatantly wrong to assume that this is an "she is Armenian so all Armenians everywhere must vote for her regardless of whether they have heard a word of her singing, been able to compare her to the other acts, or have ever listened to the BBC" situation. If you bother to take a look at the site, it allows you to listen to the words of her song, as well as everyone elses and then cast a vote for your favorite.

                      As Mr. Mkrtchyan so correctly put, it is our "chance", our opportunity if you will, to help. If you don't like her music, and don't care to support her out of national solidarity, that's your perogative. However, we did our part to make sure you knew the opportunity was there to help - and as you can see it worked, even if you chose not to take that opportunity.

                      Comment

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