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Opinion

Obituary: Lord Weidenfeld

A life of power and seduction

January 21, 2016 14:18
With Barenboim and the conductor’s wife, Elena Bashkirova, Beirut 1991
2 min read

Formidable thinker, supreme networker, astute businessman and much-married great seducer: Lord Weidenfeld who died on Wednesday aged 96 was a multi-dimensional character whose charm and intellectual curiosity helped him become a force in publishing and a friend of the great and the good.

Even after he became a favourite with - and part of - the British establishment, he revelled in the freedom that being an outsider gave him.

He never let ideology - or religion, for that matter - shackle him: a firm believer in bridge-building, he was friends with both Labour and Conservatives. And although proud of his Jewish roots and a committed Zionist, he still managed to be close to Pope John Paul II.

Arthur George Weidenfeld was born in Vienna, the only child of well-to-do parents. He read law at the University of Vienna and at the same time attended the Consular Academy, a sort of diplomatic college where he learnt four or five foreign languages, which would turn out to be a lifeline.