Mr. Ruby. I don’t know. There he had access to a chaplain though because it wasn’t a large camp.

Mr. Griffin. Yes.

Mr. Ruby. When I say you don’t have access, I am thinking of overseas where it might be a small unit, like where I was there wasn’t a Jewish chaplain.

Mr. Griffin. What I am trying to get at is this occurred while he was in the service. In order for him to properly observe mourning for your mother would he have had to have done something so that somebody else would have to be aware he was doing this other than Jack simply telling them. Would he have done something in his area where he lived or light a candle or would he have gone to a chaplain or gone in some place and prayed where people could have seen him. What would there have been observed by other people?

Mr. Ruby. I don’t know. How can I answer that. I wasn’t with him.

Mr. Griffin. But you know what the requirements are of the Jewish faith to properly observe mourning for people.

Mr. Ruby. Yes.

Mr. Griffin. What would some of the things have been that Jack would have had to have done?

Mr. Ruby. Just say the prayer, to read it out of the book or if you know it from memory, by that time after a while you know it from memory.

Mr. Griffin. And he could have repeated that to himself?