Norma Lerner enjoys getting to know Lerner College of Medicine students. | Photo: Willie McAllister

The generosity of Norma Lerner and her late husband, Al, has had a profound impact on virtually every corner of Cleveland Clinic, from care to research to education. Indeed, it’s hard to know where to even begin a conversation about all the good that has come from their giving. So we started … here:

Twenty years ago, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine welcomed its first class. Since then, you’ve made a point of meeting incoming students. Why? 

It’s very important to me because this is a continuation of my husband’s legacy.1 The students and I go to lunch. I ask each of them to tell me about themselves — where they went to school, what they’re pursuing, what being at the Lerner College of Medicine means to them. It gives me great pleasure. 

The college broke ground in a number of ways, from its emphasis on problem-based learning to its tuition-free model. Two decades into this grand experiment, are you pleased with the results? 

Definitely. On Match Day, when our students find out where they’re going next to continue their training, it’s amazing. They go to the best places in the country. Whatever they end up doing, they’re successful. As part of our five-year program, students must do research. It really sets them apart from graduates of other programs. 

Speaking of research, when the Lerner Research Institute was established, Mr. Lerner said: “If we can make advances, find cures and make improvements either in extending people’s lives or improving their quality of life, that’s terrific.”2 When you reflect today on the impact, how does it make you feel? 

There are really no words. I’m so pleased we made this contribution. We were told that research is the most important thing that Cleveland Clinic does, because the discoveries go from the bench to the bedside. These researchers are so dedicated to improving medicine. 

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Norma and Al Lerner

Cleveland Clinic Children’s Lerner School for Autism touches a lot of lives, too.3 What was your vision for the school? 

It came from my daughter.4 After she visited the old facility, she said, “We have to do something.” Her vision was to do better there for the children and their families. So we made a commitment. Now it’s an amazing place. There’s no greater joy than seeing what the school has done for these children. Parents move to Cleveland just to be able to send their children there.

You’ve talked about your humble beginnings and how you were taught to give back from a young age. Clearly, those lessons stuck with you. 

My parents had very little money. They always had to work hard to make ends meet. I remember this gentleman who came by our apartment with a little can. He was raising money for something. My mother scraped together a bunch of coins to put in the can. From that day on, I realized how important it is to give back. In that way, Al and were very similar. His parents and my parents were immigrants from different parts of Russia. His parents were giving people, too. It was in our DNA. This is what we were taught. I was very lucky to have met Al, to marry him and to share in his success.5  As soon as we had enough money, we wanted to make a contribution to society. We just had to find the right place. Both of us were pleased to be able to do the things we’ve done with Cleveland Clinic.

You created the 1921 Society to foster a culture of philanthropy at Cleveland Clinic.6 How can we inspire others to follow the example set by donors like you?

Good question. I’ll tell you a story. When we were going to make our major gift, Al kept thinking we would do it anonymously. He didn’t really want publicity. He was shy in that way. Then he spoke to a friend of his, a very wealthy man in California whose name appears on many buildings in L.A. He told Al that he had to put his name on the gift because that’s how you get other people to give. When they see your name on a building, they’re going to want their name on a building, too. That really held true. I’ve seen that happen many times.

As you continue to try to do the most good for the most people, why is Cleveland Clinic a good partner for your philanthropy?7

Cleveland Clinic is the most wonderful place. I grew up in New York City, and I was exposed to many hospitals there through family and so on. The care we get at Cleveland Clinic is better than any care anywhere, as far as I’m concerned. When we first got involved, Dr. Fred Loop was running Cleveland Clinic. We became very close friends with Fred and Bernadine Healy.8 It was really Bernadine who convinced us to build the Lerner Research Center. I still live in Cleveland. I don’t want to leave, because Cleveland Clinic is here. To me, it’s one of the most outstanding hospitals in the world. 

Notes

  1. The Lerner College of Medicine was established in 2002 with a $100 million gift from Al and Norma Lerner. Mr. Lerner, former chairman and CEO of the MBNA Corporation,  passed away later that same year. In 2008, at the behest of then-Cleveland Clinic CEO and President Delos “Toby” Cosgrove, MD, the college became the first U.S. medical school to award full-tuition scholarships to all students, subsidized by Cleveland Clinic.
  2. The Lerner Research Institute opened in 1999.
  3. The Lerner School for Autism is a chartered nonpublic school for students from the age of first diagnosis through 22 years old.
  4. Norma Lerner has two children, Nancy and Randy, as well as eight grandchildren.
  5. Al and Norma Lerner were married in 1955.
  6. The 1921 Society honors donors who have made lifetime gifts of $1 million or more to Cleveland Clinic.
  7. In addition to supporting Cleveland Clinic, the Lerner Foundation generously supports a range of causes across the arts, culture, education, healthcare and veterans affairs.
  8. Floyd “Fred” Loop, MD, and Bernadine Healy, MD, were a Cleveland Clinic power couple. He was CEO and Chair; she led the research division.