The Krauthammer Boys: Charles and Marcel

In January of 2006, Charles Krauthammer wrote an appreciation of his older brother, Marcel, who had died shortly after the New Year. It was a far more personal offering than most of his written work and, despite a full catalogue of essays and columns that influenced the thinking of world leaders, it was one of the most memorable pieces in a long and distinguished career. It was a favorite of Charles’ most devoted readers and, in fact, of Charles himself.

When they were children, Marcel, four years older, looked out for his kid brother and insisted that he be included. Charles recalled:

Whenever I think back to my childhood friends—Morgie, Fiedler, Klipper, the Beller boys—I realize they were not my contemporaries but his. And when you’re young, four years is a chasm. But everyone knew Marcel’s rule: “Charlie plays.” The corollary was understood: If Charlie doesn’t play, Marcel doesn’t play. I played. From the youngest age he taught me to go one-on-one with the big boys, a rare and priceless gift.


Each year, the Krauthammers decamped to the beaches of Long Island, even before school in Charles’ native Canada let out, for what Charles described as an “endless summer” of fun.

For those three months of endless summer, Marcel and I were inseparable, vagabond brothers shuttling endlessly on our Schwinns from beach to beach, ballgame to ballgame. Day and night we played every sport ever invented, and some games, such as three-step stoopball and sidewalk spaldeen, we just made up ourselves. For a couple of summers we even wangled ourselves jobs teaching sailing at the splendidly named Treasure Island day camp nearby. It was paradise.


Charles ended the column recalling a photograph taken when he and Marcel were young boys, tanned and relaxed and best friends in the way that only brothers can be.

Whenever I look at that picture, I know what we were thinking at the moment it was taken: It will forever be thus. Ever brothers. Ever young. Ever summer.

My brother Marcel died on Tuesday, Jan. 17. It was winter. He was 59.


Charles Krauthammer died on Thursday, June 21. It was the first day of summer.

Ever summer.

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