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Born in Cambridge, on April 17, 1934, to Melkon and Mary Samoorian, Samoorian was baptized Diran. He attended public school in Arlington and graduated from Lexington High School. Even though he grew up very much an American, his Armenian ethos was breathed into his soul by his late grandmother who sang Armenian hymns to him while he was a young boy. He received numerous art awards; won a scholarship in 1951 to study mural painting in Verona, Italy, and attended the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts. When he turned 16, an awareness of his Armenian heritage emerged, and he began attending the Holy Trinity and then the St. James Churches in Boston and Water town, respectively.He majored in history and government at Boston University. From 1954 to 1956 he served in the US Army’s military intelligence operation where he was a special assistant to a two-star general. He received an honorable discharge in 1956. He returned to Boston University, where he studied marketing, advertising and graphic arts. While he resumed his studies, he also became further acquainted with Armenian organizations again and he rejoined the ACYOA and the AYF. It was in the late 1950s that he began expressing an interest in the priesthood. He began working with Fr. Papken Maksoudian at Holy Trinity Church in Boston [later Cambridge]and even did some writing, editing and design work for the church. Maksoudian asked him to paint a painting for the side altars of the newly- consecrated church [1960] and to this day, the painting of Sts. Sahag and Mesrob hangs in the sanctuary. In 1961, he decided to become a priest. The Knights of Vartan became his sponsor and he left for the Holy City of Jerusalem in 1962 to begin his studies.In 1962, Samoorian entered the Seminary of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem. The late Patriarch Elishe quickly utilized his vast talents by commissioning him to restore the priceless artwork of and treasures of the monastery. He was also called upon to design the mosaic of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, which hangs in the Tomb of the Holy Sepluchre. It was here that he was discovered by the world-renowned Armenian architect and artist Edouard Utujian and he was asked by him to become a fellow at the highly acclaimed art school at the Sorbonne in Paris, France. Because Samoorian was passionately in love with the monastery and his desire to become a monastic of the Armenian Church, he declined. He continued his studies at the monastery under the great Armenologist Archbishop Norayr Bogharian and Armenian teacher par excellence, Manual Keuseyan. It was under the latter’s tutelage that he became a master of the Armenian language and idiom. Soon thereafter in 1964, Samoorian was ordained a deacon by Patriarch Elishe and now known as Diratsou Diran.During the Six-Day War in 1967, Fr. Ghevont was personally responsible for the negotiated release of 12 young boys from various Israeli prisons and concentration camps in the West Bank.He returned to America in 1968 and attended St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary in Scarsdale, NY. During his tenure at Sts. Vartanantz, he was instrumental in acquiring 16 acres in nearby Chelmsford, Mass. in order to build a new church.He was elevated to rank of Vartabed of the Armenian Church by Archbishop Manoogian in 1973. As its new pastor, Samoorian worked tirelessly. By 1976, he had built the most vibrant ACYOA in the diocese and laid host to its ACYOA Sports Weekend and Convention.