George Moran’s moving tribute to his wife, Tatiana Schlossberg. A loving remembrance of her courageous battle against cancer.

“In November 2025, Caroline Kennedy stood beside her daughter Tatiana Schlossberg with the quiet strength that has defined generations of Kennedy women, offering unwavering love and support as her 35-year-old daughter courageously shared her journey with acute myeloid leukemia in a deeply personal essay published in The New Yorker, revealing a diagnosis that had come just hours after the joyful birth of her second child, Josephine, in May 2024, when doctors noticed an unusually high white blood cell count that led to the discovery of a rare form of blood illness with a mutation called Inversion 3, found in less than two percent of cases, a moment that transformed celebration into medical crisis and required the kind of resilience that only love and family bonds can provide.
Tatiana’s essay, published on the 62nd anniversary of her grandfather President John F. Kennedy’s passing, demonstrated remarkable courage as she opened her heart to readers about the shock of her diagnosis, writing that she had swum a mile in the pool just the day before delivery while nine months pregnant, feeling healthy and strong with no indication that anything was wrong, making the sudden news almost impossible to comprehend as she tried to reconcile her active, vibrant life with the reality doctors were presenting to her in those first overwhelming hours after welcoming her daughter into the world.
Throughout her journey, which included five weeks initially at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York, followed by intensive chemotherapy treatments at home, two bone marrow transplants with stem cells generously donated first by her sister Rose Schlossberg, who turned out to be a perfect match and gave her sister this precious gift without hesitation, and later by an anonymous young donor from the Pacific Northwest whose selfless decision to join the bone marrow registry made hope possible, plus participation in multiple clinical trials including CAR T-cell therapy as her medical team worked tirelessly to find treatments that could give her more time with her beloved family, Tatiana was surrounded by an incredible network of love centered on her parents, Caroline and Edwin Schlossberg, who visited her hospital room almost daily, held her hand through difficult moments, helped care for their grandchildren Edwin and Josephine, and provided the kind of steady, unconditional support that parents offer their children regardless of age or circumstance.
Caroline Kennedy, who has faced profound personal loss throughout her life including the passing of her father when she was just five years old, her mother Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in 1994, her uncle Senator Edward Kennedy in 2009, and her cousin John F. Kennedy Jr. in a plane crash in 1999, drew upon reserves of strength built over decades to support her daughter through every appointment, every treatment, every difficult conversation with doctors, and every moment when hope felt fragile, embodying the grace under pressure that has long been associated with the Kennedy family while simultaneously experiencing the unique heartbreak of a mother watching her child face an illness beyond anyone’s control.
Edwin Schlossberg, Tatiana’s father, the renowned designer and artist who has been Caroline’s devoted partner since their marriage in 1986, stood equally strong alongside his daughter, bringing his quiet wisdom, creativity, and deep love to support both Tatiana and her young family, helping to create moments of normalcy and joy for his grandchildren even during the most challenging days, reading stories to three-year-old Edwin, holding baby Josephine with tender care, and ensuring that family bonds remained strong and that his daughter felt surrounded by love at every turn.
Tatiana’s younger siblings, Rose Schlossberg, a talented actress and producer who not only donated bone marrow to save her sister but also provided emotional support through countless hospital visits and caring for her niece and nephew, and Jack Schlossberg, who had just completed his dual graduate degrees from Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School and recently announced his intention to run for Congress in New York’s 17th district, visited frequently and brought laughter, encouragement, and the kind of sibling connection that transcends words, with Jack later sharing Tatiana’s essay on social media with the poignant caption “Life is short – let it rip,” honoring his sister’s courage in speaking her truth and living authentically even while facing unimaginable circumstances. Perhaps most profoundly moving was Tatiana’s description of her husband, Dr. George Moran, whom she called perfect, kind, funny, and a handsome genius, a man who transformed from partner to primary caregiver without hesitation, sleeping on hospital floors to stay near his wife, managing all communications with doctors and insurance companies, handling household responsibilities while caring for their two young children, preparing nutritious food according to strict dietary requirements, bathing Tatiana when she couldn’t do it herself, sitting beside her through difficult nights when medication affected her moods, and never once wavering in his devotion or allowing her to face any moment alone, embodying the deepest meaning of marriage vows through his actions every single day.
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In her essay, Tatiana wrote with heartbreaking honesty about her greatest fears, particularly that her children might not remember her clearly, that three-year-old Edwin’s memories would become confused with photographs and stories others told him rather than genuine recollection of time spent together, and that baby Josephine, whom she often couldn’t hold or care for directly due to infection risks following her transplants, might never truly know her mother’s love except through the devotion of others who would keep her memory alive, thoughts that any parent facing serious illness understands with profound sadness yet which Tatiana expressed with vulnerability and grace that touched countless readers.
Throughout her months of treatment, Tatiana remained focused on cherishing present moments, finding joy in reading books with her son, celebrating small victories in her medical progress, expressing gratitude for the support surrounding her, and continuing to think about the environmental advocacy work that had defined her professional life, including her dream of writing a book about the oceans, their challenges and possibilities, a project she realized with sadness she would not be able to complete but which represented her ongoing commitment to making the world better for future generations including her own children. Caroline Kennedy, serving at the time as U.S. Ambassador to Australia, a position she held from 2022 to 2024 before returning home to be closer to her family during Tatiana’s illness, demonstrated once again her ability to balance public duty with personal devotion, ultimately prioritizing her role as mother when her daughter needed her most, traveling between hospital visits, family gatherings, and the daily rhythms of supporting both Tatiana and her young grandchildren, creating stability and love during a period of tremendous uncertainty and challenge.
The family’s strength was tested further as Tatiana’s treatments, despite initial promise including a period of remission after her sister’s bone marrow donation, ultimately could not overcome the aggressive nature of her rare form of illness, with doctors eventually sharing during her latest clinical trial that they could keep her alive for about a year, perhaps, but that her time was limited, news that required extraordinary courage to hear, accept, and then share publicly in her November essay, demonstrating Tatiana’s commitment to honesty and her desire to use even her most difficult experiences to educate others about medical research, the importance of bone marrow donation, and the need for continued funding and support for patients facing serious illnesses.
On December 30, 2025, surrounded by the love that had sustained her throughout her 35 years, Tatiana passed away peacefully, with her family announcing through the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library Foundation with words that captured both their profound grief and the enduring beauty of her spirit, saying simply and powerfully that their beautiful Tatiana had passed away that morning and would always remain in their hearts, signed by George, their children Edwin and Josephine, her parents Ed and Caroline, and her siblings Jack, Rose, and Rory, a circle of love that reflects the legacy she leaves behind and the family bonds that will carry her memory forward. In the days following her passing, tributes poured in from around the world, with family members, friends, colleagues, and readers whose lives she had touched through her environmental journalism and her courageous final essay sharing memories of Tatiana’s intelligence, kindness, humor, and grace, with her cousin Maria Shriver remembering her as valiant, strong, courageous, smart, wicked smart, sassy, and full of light, humor, and joy, someone who used her words to educate others about protecting our planet and who brought brightness into every space she entered, while countless others expressed gratitude for her willingness to share her journey with such honesty and vulnerability, helping others facing similar challenges feel less alone and inspiring conversations about living fully in whatever time we have.
Caroline Kennedy, having now lost her daughter to an illness that struck without warning and progressed despite the best efforts of exceptional medical teams, stands as a testament to a mother’s enduring love and strength, having supported Tatiana through every step of her journey with dignity, devotion, and the kind of grace that comes from deep faith in family bonds, and now carries forward as grandmother to Edwin and Josephine, ensuring they grow up knowing their mother’s love through stories, photographs, and the values Tatiana embodied, while also holding space for her own grief as any mother would, having watched her child face the unfairness of a life cut far too short yet having also witnessed Tatiana’s remarkable courage, her capacity for love, and her determination to live meaningfully during every moment available to her.
Tatiana’s legacy lives on not only in her published work including her award-winning book Inconspicuous Consumption that won the Rachel Carson Environment Book Award and continues inspiring readers to think differently about their environmental impact, and in her journalism that appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, and other prestigious publications where her voice enriched important conversations about our shared planet, but more importantly in the love she shared with George and their children, in the memories held by her parents and siblings who witnessed her extraordinary grace under impossible circumstances, in the example she set of living purposefully and speaking truthfully even when facing profound challenges, and in the countless people inspired by her courage to cherish relationships, express gratitude, support medical research and bone marrow donation, and recognize that meaning comes not from the length of our days but from the depth of our connections and the positive impact we have on others and our shared world, lessons her family including Caroline Kennedy will carry forward as they honor her memory and ensure her children grow up knowing the remarkable woman who was their mother, a woman who faced the greatest challenge with grace, love, and unwavering commitment to what matters most in life.”