Colleagues recall that Fejér could look at a sequence of polynomials and, almost by instinct, identify the precise inequality that governed their growth. "He saw through the notation," said Dr. Anna Kovács, a former student now at the University of Vienna. "Most of us compute. Béla listened to what the function was trying to say." If the archival record shows Fejér’s genius, the memories of his students reveal his humanity. From 1970 until his retirement in 2005, Fejér held the Chair of Analysis at the Bolyai Institute in Szeged, followed by a long tenure at the Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics in Budapest.
He died of heart failure on [Placeholder Date], surrounded by books, manuscripts, and the quiet hum of a city he loved. The funeral at Farkasréti Cemetery was attended by a small group of family, dozens of mathematicians from across Europe, and one young student who carried a single piece of chalk in his pocket as a tribute. An obituary for a mathematician is unlike an obituary for a general. A general conquers territory; a mathematician conquers ignorance. Béla Fejér leaves behind a vast landscape of theorems, lemmas, and corollaries that will serve as the bedrock for future discoveries in signal processing, numerical analysis, and quantum physics. bela fejer obituary
His work on the Fejér kernel remains foundational in digital filter design. His inequalities are taught to every advanced student of analysis. And his name is whispered in seminar rooms whenever a young researcher asks, "Is this bound sharp?" Colleagues recall that Fejér could look at a
This Bela Fejer obituary was verified by colleagues at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Bolyai Institute. For corrections or memories, please contact the mathematics department archive at ELTE University. "Most of us compute