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

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

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/02/obituaries/marion-wiesel.html

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

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

Alex Traub

Feb. 2, 2025, 7:40 p.m. ET

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 already 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 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.


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