Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Marion Wiesel, Translator, Strategist and Wife of Elie Wiesel, Dies at 94. (NY Times, February 2, 2025)

Wonderful woman, who helped guide Elie Wiesel's zealous advocacy, including his calling out President Ronald Wilson Reagan for his trip to Bitburg to place a wreath on Nazi German Waffen SS killers in Germany.  Remarkable story. 

Footnote: no federal judgeship would ever go to conservative legal scholar MARSHALL J. BREGER, who was the Reagan White House liaison to the Orthodox Jewish community.  Bumptious BREGER allegedly advised that the Reagan White House that it would be OK for Reagan to go to Bitburg.  He was kicked upstairs to be chair of the Administrative Conference of the United States, once a source of objective policy recommendations, which degenerated under BREGER, with the likes of Phyllis Schlaffly among its members.  My mentor, USDOLChief Judge Nahum Litt, called ACUS "the Heritage Foundation metastasized."  I wrote about ACUS for Common Cause Magazine in 1989. Congress examined ACUS's biased recommendations and unread studies, asking questions and demanding answers.  Bottom line: thanks to Congressional appropriators electing funding, ACUS ceased to exist from 1995-2010.  BREGER was later Solicitor of the Department of Labor, where he actually went to court, and was made second chair in a labor law case, presumably to polish his non-existent litigation credentials.  The American Bar Association saw right through him; its committee on the federal judiciary would have found him not qualified, and President Bush never nominated him to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. 

Marion Wiesel, Translator, Strategist and Wife of Elie Wiesel, Dies at 94

A fellow survivor, she was a literary and political adviser who helped her husband gain recognition as a singular moral authority on the Holocaust.

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Elie Wiesel in a jacket and tie stands in front of a bookcase with one arm around his wife, Marion.
Marion and Elie Wiesel in their home in New York City in 1986. She translated 14 of his books and encouraged him to pursue a public career.Credit...Yvonne Hemsey/Getty Images

Marion Wiesel, who translated many books written by her husband, Elie Wiesel, including the final edition of his magnum opus, “Night,” and who encouraged him to pursue a wide-ranging public career, helping him become the most renowned interpreter of the Holocaust, died on Sunday at her home in Greenwich, Conn. She was 94.

Her death was confirmed by their son, Elisha Wiesel.

The Wiesels met in the late 1960s and married in 1969. By then, Mr. Wiesel had achieved wide acclaim. “Night” — a memoir about his teenage experience at Auschwitz and a tortured spiritual reckoning about the meaning of the Holocaust — came out in 1960, originally translated from the French by Stella Rodway.

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The Weisels at the wedding, she dressed in white with a veil over her head, he with a yarmulke.
The Wiesels at their wedding in 1969. Mr. Wiesel’s writing had already won acclaim, but in the coming years, with his wife’s help, his moral stature would grow further.Credit...The Wiesel family

Mr. Wiesel’s Nobel Peace Prize and his numerous encounters with world leaders still lay decades away. Friends, relatives and writers all attributed the moral stature he achieved partly to the quiet influence of Marion.


“In the alignment of stars that helped make Wiesel the international icon he became, his marriage to Marion was among the most significant,” Joseph Berger wrote in “Elie Wiesel: Confronting the Silence” (2023), a biography.

By nature, Mr. Wiesel was a reader of literature, a chess player and an observer of Jewish rituals. Into his early 40s, he led the intense but unworldly life of a passionate intellectual. For days he might not sleep. He often forgot to eat meals. He abstained from alcohol. He took trips abroad without notice and could not be reached.

Mrs. Wiesel, too, was a Jewish survivor of the Holocaust. Following their marriage, she changed the rhythm of Mr. Wiesel’s days and expanded his sense of possibility — without altering his moral temper.

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A black-and-white portrait of Marion Wiesel, smiling.
Mrs. Wiesel in an undated family photo. “In the alignment of stars that helped make Wiesel the international icon he became, his marriage to Marion was among the most significant,” Joseph Berger wrote in his biography of Mr. Wiesel.Credit...The Wiesel family

Her most obvious impact on his career was through translation. He was an eloquent, powerful speaker of English, but he cherished his command of French, which dated from his days as a young refugee.

Mrs. Wiesel shared her husband’s cosmopolitan knowledge of European culture and fluency in several languages. She quickly began translating his writing from French to English, ultimately working on 14 of his books. None was more important than her 2006 translation of “Night.”

In his biography, Mr. Berger, a former reporter for The New York Times, wrote that of the 10 million copies that the memoir had sold, three million came after her translation. It was heavily promoted by Oprah Winfrey, and in the following years it became a widely assigned book in high schools — a concise literary work of moral instruction, like “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “Animal Farm.”

Mrs. Wiesel also advised and coached her husband as he made public appearances — including frequent TV interviews with Ted Koppel on ABC — and became a voice in world politics.


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A black-and-white photo of Elie and Marion Wiesel, as a young couple, with her holding Elisha, as a baby.
The Wiesels with their 7-month-old son, Elisha, at their home on West 84th Street in 1973.Credit...Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times

Using money from Mr. Wiesel’s 1986 Nobel Prize, the couple founded the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity. Mrs. Wiesel took the lead in managing the Beit Tzipora Centers in Israel, which provide schooling and other support to Jewish children of Ethiopian origin who have faced challenges integrating into Israeli society. The initiative reaches hundreds of children every year.

Mr. Wiesel’s other public activities included serving as the founding chairman of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Perhaps no single moment of his political career is so vividly recalled as his plea to Ronald Reagan, issued in the White House alongside the president and in front of TV cameras, not to visit the Bitburg military cemetery, where members of the SS are buried in what was then West Germany.

“That place, Mr. President, is not your place,” Mr. Wiesel said. “Your place is with victims of the SS.”

Those remarks had an editor: Mrs. Wiesel.

“There would not have been a Bitburg speech without Marion’s conviction,” the couple’s editor, Ileene Smith wrote in an email. She called Mrs. Wiesel her husband’s “most trusted adviser.”

“As his translator from the French,” she added, “Marion pored over every sentence of Elie’s work with astonishing insight into his interior world, his literary mind.”

Mary Renate (also sometimes spelled Renata) Erster was born in Vienna on Jan. 27, 1931. Her father, Emil, owned a furniture store. He and Mary watched from a street corner as Nazi troops took over Vienna.

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Marion Wiesel, in an old photo, as a girl in a checkered dress, white socks and dark shoes.
Born Mary Renate Erster, she told her classmates in Belgium that from then on she would be called Marion.Credit...The Wiesel family

A long flight ensued. Her mother, Jetta (Hubel) Erster, carefully guarded jewelry and silver candlesticks that she would barter over years of repeated escapes.

During a brief period in Belgium, Mary attended school. She announced to her classmates that she had shed her first name — which was inspired by her mother’s love of Americana — and that from then on she would be called Marion.

“It was an emotional turning point — my first step toward freedom,” she wrote in an unpublished reminiscence.

The family spent time at Gurs, a French concentration camp, then fled to Marseille, where they narrowly avoided detection thanks to the protection of neighbors. Jetta had a relative with Swiss citizenship, and the family managed to smuggle themselves into Switzerland in 1942.


The family arrived in the United States in 1949. Marion attended the University of Miami but mainly lived in New York City, where she worked at a bra factory and as a saleswoman at a department store.

She wound up having a creative career of her own. She edited “To Give Them Light” (1993), a collection of Roman Vishniac’s photographs of Eastern European Jewry before World War II. She also wrote and narrated “Children of the Night” (1999), a documentary about children killed during the Holocaust.


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Elie Wiesel, in a suit, stands next to Marion Wiesel, in a white blouse and jacket.

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SKIP ADIn addition to their son, Mrs. Wiesel is survived by her daughter and two grandchildren. Mr. Wiesel died in 2016.

The Wiesels’ relationship was not solely an experience of Holocaust remembrance. Mrs. Wiesel also had the ability to convince her philosophically inclined husband that he would, for example, enjoy going to a Broadway cast party at Sardi’s restaurant.

Back when Mr. Wiesel was single, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the revered Lubavitcher rabbi, wrote him a personal plea to marry and have children, suggesting that the propagation of the Wiesel line would be a repudiation of the Nazis. Mr. Wiesel was unconvinced: He did not want to bring more Jews into the world.

“I changed his mind,” Mrs. Wiesel told Mr. Berger. “I told him he would be happy.”

Alex Traub works on the Obituaries desk and occasionally reports on New York City for other sections of the paper. More about Alex Traub

A version of this article appears in print on Feb. 5, 2025, Section A, Page 21 of the New York edition with the headline: Marion Wiesel, 94, Who Advised and Coached Her Husband, DiesOrder Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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