Esther Hoffe

Esther Hoffe
Born May 8, 1906
Troppau, Austrian Silesia, Austria-Hungary (now Opava, Czech Republic)
Died September 2, 2007
Tel Aviv, Israel
Occupation Secretary
Spouse(s) Otto Hoffe

Ilse Esther Hoffe (May 8, 1906 – September 2, 2007) was a Jewish woman known for being the secretary and presumed mistress of writer Max Brod. Upon his death in 1968, she received a large trove of materials relating to Franz Kafka, Brod's friend. Some of these were sold but most were controversially passed, unreleased to the public, to her two daughters after her own death. She was born in Troppau (Opava).

Biography

Hoffe and her husband Otto met Max Brod in Israel soon after he had escaped Prague ahead of the Nazi invasion of the rest Czechoslovakia in March 1939. After the death of Brod's wife in 1942, he grew very close to the Hoffes.[1] The three took vacations together and Esther became Brod's secretary, with an office in his apartment. The relationship has been described by many who knew them as "ménage à trois",[1] although romantic connections were never publicly acknowledged and to this day Esther's daughter Eva maintains that no such relationship existed.[1]

Esther was Brod's caretaker as his health declined,[1] and upon his death in 1968 stewardship of his trove of Kafka materials and his own papers passed to her. Because of differing interpretations of Brod's final wishes, it is not clear if she was a beneficiary who gained ownership of the papers, or an executor responsible for eventually fulfilling Brod's intent to hand the papers over to the National Library of Israel.[1]

The unclear nature of Esther's rights did not preclude her from selling some of Kafka's papers. In 1974, approximately 22 letters and 10 postcards from Kafka to Brod were sold in private sales, it is presumed by Hoffe, to buyers in Germany.[1] The next year, she was arrested at the Tel Aviv airport on suspicion that she was attempting to remove original manuscripts without first filing photocopies with the National Archives, as required by law. Upon search, photocopies of Kafka's letters and purportedly an original diary by Brod were found in her luggage.[1] In 1988, she auctioned at least one more item from the Kafka papers: an original manuscript of The Trial, which brought approximately $2 million.[1]

The rare sales notwithstanding, in the 40 years between Brod's death and her own, Hoffe maintained a close hold on the papers. They were inventoried by an official archivist in the aftermath of her arrest, but this inventory is believed to be very incomplete, especially as many of the papers were out of the country in Swiss bank deposit boxes. A philologist named Bernhard Echte worked with Hoffe in the 1980s and may have produced the most complete inventory, but copies of this are difficult to obtain.[1] After Hoffe's death in 2007, in Tel Aviv, the papers and an estimated $1 million in cash passed to her daughters Eva and Ruth. Eva, who lived with her mother for 40 years and now controls the papers, has taken the lead in litigation resulting from the estate, the probate of which remains contested by the Israeli National Library.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Batuman, Elif (22 September 2010), "Kafka's Last Trial", New York Times Magazine
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