Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. What I am?

Mr. Jenner. What are your views?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. My views?

Well, I tell you. I am not a Communist by all means at all. I think that revolution in Russia was inevitable. It is just horrible that it happened that way, and it was so bloody, and so many people——

Mr. Jenner. You are talking now about the revolution of the 1920's?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. 1917, I think.

Mr. Jenner. 1918, 1919.

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. 1917, 1918—that is when it started. I know in fact very little of the whole thing, because at home there was never any conversation—too many people were killed. In fact, from what I understand, all the families of my father and mother were killed, too. So we never had any conversation about it. We just were kept away from the whole thing.

And, beside, I deliberately stayed away from all of that. I said it is none of my business, I have never been there, I don't know what it is all about, I don't want to know anything about it. I don't want to be prejudiced to anything.

But after, later on, when I grew up and the revolution was necessary, it is just too bad it happened like that.