who's also Ruth. Her name is Ruth Payne. She lives in Texas, by the way. And she's studying Russian.
She's fascinated by the Russian language. She's a Quaker who wants to study Russian. Don't think
she ever managed it in her life, but at that moment she wanted to study Russian. And in her
Visits Arthur Young and his wife. Obviously she discusses the fact that she has this Russian
Studying Russian. And she's, she's talking to the commission, you know, and she's going, how she
because they're national churches. So you have Greek Orthodox churches, Russian Orthodox, Serbian,
up to us and he says, Russian Orthodox representatives. And I say, no, Slavonic Orthodox representatives.
So they say when you're, you know, getting briefed, like, hey, just look out for Russian spies.
in the, in two different Orthodox churches. One was the Russian Orthodox Church outside Russia.
Oswald and Marina, all, all the people he was being introduced to, okay, were members of the Russian
Orthodox Church outside Russia. These were the Russian Orthodox who were anti-communist. They fled, uh,
Moscow during the revolution, uh, the Russian Revolution in seven, 1917. They fled to Paris first,
the one on 97th Street and 5th, and that was the Russian church that owed allegiance to Moscow.
militia in 1918, 1919, you know, the, the war ended in 1918, World War I. Uh, there was the Russian
scientist. But there were enough Russian scientists, they could rebuild it and see if they could make it fly.
So they were in contact. The American groups and the Russian groups were in contact. They found
that out later. Wow. Because the, the, the Russian scientists they had in New Mexico,
which would then get sent over by courier to the Russian scientists in the Soviet Union.
which I only know the Greek alphabet because I studied the Russian, the Kyrillic alphabet. I said,
the Russian Orthodox church, the staff for the bishop is exactly that. Two serpents around a